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Despite
the inherent danger of jumping from a great height, several million
successful jumps have taken place since 1980. This is attributable
to bungee operators rigorously conforming to standards and guidelines
governing jumps, such as double checking calculations and fittings
for every jump. Unfortunately accidents in this sport tend to
be of the spectacular, bizarre, and terminal variety. A relatively
common mistake is to use too long a cord. The cord should be substantially
shorter than the height of the bridge to allow it room to stretch.
To illustrate how easy it is to overestimate the permissible length
of cord, consider the following question:
When
the cord reaches its normal length, does one:
(a) stop?
(b) start to slow?
(c) keep getting faster?
The
answer, perhaps surprisingly, is (c). One does not even start
to slow until the cord has already stretched somewhat, because
the cord's resistance to distortion is zero at the natural length,
and increases only gradually after, taking some time to even equal
the jumper's weight. See also Potential energy for a discussion
of the spring constant, and the force required to distort bungee
cords and other spring-like objects.
Equipment
The
elastic rope first used in bungee jumping, and still used by many
commercial operators, is factory-produced braided shock cord.
This is comprised of many latex strands enclosed in a tough outer
cover. The outer cover may be applied when the latex is prestressed,
so that the cord's resistance to extension is already significant
at the cord's natural length. This gives a harder, sharper bounce.
The braided cover also provides significant durability benefits.
Other operators, including A J Hackett and most southern-hemisphere
operators, use unbraided cords in which the latex strands are
exposed. These give a softer, longer bounce, and can be home-produced.
Although
there is a certain elegance in using only a simple ankle attachment,
the many accidents in which participants have become detached
lead many commercial operators to use a body harness, if only
as a backup for an ankle attachment. Body harnesses are generally
derived from climbing equipment rather than parachute equipment.
Retrieval
methods vary according to the site used. Mobile cranes provide
the greatest recovery speed and flexibility, the jumper being
lowered rapidly to ground level and detached. Many other mechanisms
have been devised according to the nature of the jump platform
and the need for a rapid turn-around.
Competition
For the many participants who make jumps as a one-off thrill,
the idea of competing is irrelevant, but regular jumpers have
gone to great lengths to devise criteria for competition, mostly
based on acrobatics. Bungee jumping was featured in the early
days of the ESPN Extreme Games (X Games) but the lack of an objective
measure of skill detracted from the event compared to other extreme
sports.
Bungee jumping in the mass media...
Several major movies have featured bungee jumps, most famously
the opening sequence of the 1995 James Bond film GoldenEye in
which Bond makes a jump over the edge of a dam in Russia (in reality
the dam is on the Switzerland-Italy border, and the jump was genuine,
not an animated special effect).
In
the television program The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, the secondary
charactor Trevor was killed while proposing to Hilary Banks during
a bungee jump aired live on his television news program.
Variations
In "Catapult" (Reverse Bungee or Bungee Rocket) one
starts on the ground. While one is attached to the ground the
cord is stretched upward; then one is released from the ground
and one shoots up into the air.
"Twin
Tower" is similar with two oblique cords.
Also
attempted has been a "Bungee Drop," where the jumper
has cut the cord just before springing back up, and hit the ground
safely.
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