BRS Parachutes: Defining Aviation Safety

It's a simple idea, really. A parachute which will, when deployed, turn what could be a very bad situation into one in which not only the occupants, but in many cases the airplane, survive. That's the concept behind the full-airframe parachutes for the general aviation market manufactured by BRS Aviation.

Prior to 1975, few had attempted to implement the idea to design a parachute for an aircraft, even though it had been talked about for nearly a century. In that year, Boris Popov of Saint Paul, Minnesota, survived a 400-foot fall in a collapsed hang glider. The event led Popov to invent the whole-aircraft parachute system and to found Ballistic Recovery Systems (BRS) in 1980.

The systems are available as standard equipment on Cirrus and Flight Design aircraft, and the company has received and STC to retrofit Cessna 172 and 182 airplanes with the system. All week long BRS will have a Red Bird full motion flight simulator will an integrated handle. This handle will feature a true pull force function, while the simulator will provide the experience of a parachute deployment.

BRS will also have a more simple BRS-172 mock up with handle pull force mock up for those not interested in waiting for the full simulator experience.

BRS parachutes have saved 276 lives since they first came on the market in 1982. At Oshkosh, two survivors will discuss their experiences using the BRS parachute system in a talk entitled "Why I Deployed my BRS Cirrus Parachute" ... held at the Forum Pavilion on Friday, June 27th between 11:30am-12:45pm.

Did You Know? Great Facts About BRS Parachutes

BRS Stays In The News

 

FMI: www.brsparachutes.com, Oshkosh Display Area #2018