Team Fastrax members include John Hart, Niklas Hemlin, Doug Park, Thomas Hughes and Steve Redinbo. Team members have a cumulative 80 years of skydiving experience and hold the highest licenses and ratings awarded by the United States Parachute Association (USPA), including the "Professional Exhibition Rating." Team Fastrax also carries USPA Demonstration Jump insurance for your peace of mind.

About Formation Skydiving


Some call Formation Skydiving "belly-flying", with the earth always below, and the skies above. Formation Skydiving is much more than this, and entails quite a long history. In the 70's, freefall veterans experimented for a long time to hook up two people while falling straight down. Currently, the span of Formation Skydiving begins with a two-way

and ends with a 400-way as the official world record. It's a social affair in the air: skydivers are holding hands and legs and sometimes both at the same time to build all kind of different formations. Organizers and coaches engineer the puzzle. Formation Skydiving has two different areas: recreational formation skydiving, also known as fun jumping, and the competitive arena, also known as RW Relative Work.

Recreational Formation Skydiving

Recreational Formation Skydivers meet on all kind of different occasions to build formations in the sky. They are filling their local jump planes on the weekends, as well as weekday sunset loads, to the maximum capacity. As the number of bigger events with larger aircraft continues to grow, they meet with skydivers from all over the country, sometimes all over the world, to build large formations. The current world record is a 400-way formation. Team Fastrax Outside Center Doug Park participated on this dive in February of 2006

Competitive Formation Skydiving

Competitive Formation Skydivers sharpen their flying skills in wind tunnels and jump camps then go out to compete. Formation Skydiving has become a very well organized competition arena. Regional leagues and meets are offering competitions for all performance levels each season. Nationwide championships bring the best teams in the United States together (such as the National Skydiving League Championships and the USPA National Championships). The national champions of all countries in the world compete each year at the World Cup or at the World Championships and the best teams of the world are invited to compete at the World Air Games. Formation Skydiving is slowly forging its way to becoming a part of the Olympic Games.

Formation Skydiving competitions are recognized by the IOC (International Olympic Committee) and sanctioned by the FAI (Federation Aeronautique Internationale), the IPC (International Parachuting Committee) and by the USPA (United States Parachute Association) in the United States. The sanctioned competition disciplines are: 4-Way 8-Way 16-way.

Competition teams perform up to six rounds per day at a competition. After exiting the aircraft, teams have a certain amount of time available (4-way 35 seconds, 8-way and 16-way 50 seconds) to perform the same pre-determined sequence of formations and maneuvers. The team with the most accumulated points wins the round. At a competition, all teams must perform between six and ten rounds. Each competition round has a different sequence of formations and maneuvers. A team videographer films the performance and delivers the footage to the judges for evaluation. The major competitions have live broadcast of the freefall and live judging.

Twenty years ago, the world record holders in 4 way were scoring 8 points in time, and no one would ever have believed that our sport would have advanced to currently scoring 42 points in time. This rapid progression is testimony that formation skydiving is truly a professional, athletic sport with highly trained athletes, and is a skill that can be developed and cultivated like many other professional sports in our culture.

Position:
Tail

Pro Rating
License: D25666
USPA: 173444
   Home Drop Zone:
   Start Skydiving
Position:
Inside Center

License: C102955
USPA: 157385
   Home Drop Zone:
   Skydive DeLand
Position:
Outside Center

AFFI
License: D14871
USPA: 80357
   Home Drop Zone:
   Skydive DeLand
Position:
Videoagrapher

License: D18758
USPA: 109631
   Home Drop Zone:
   Start Skydiving
Position:
Point

License: D22356
USPA: 138112
   Home Drop Zone:
   Start Skydiving