SPEEDFLYER STORY // Alexandre Mulle
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- Опубліковано 3 сер 2024
- @AlexandreMulle - the man who "Grinded the crack" with speedwing and reached more than 1 million views on UA-cam.
His passionate story, his close calls, discussions about piloting style and speedflying safety in general.
If you have any additional questions to Alexandre, ask in the comments below or directly
/ mulle_alexandre
WHOOSH - мой телеграм-канал про спидфлай: www.bit.ly/whoosh-speedfly
Timestamps:
0:00 Getting into speedflying
4:40 Regular job
5:34 What family thinks
6:05 Sketchy part of speedflying
7:06 Number of flights
7:34 Accidents
8:34 Fluid2 close call
9:33 Best places to fly
11:37 Grinding the Crack
14:36 Speedflying and UA-cam likes
16:45 How to keep on progressing and stay on the safe side
19:41 Toggles or rears
23:37 Importance of weight shifting
25:14 R3 5.8 vs 6.5
26:39 Best way to downsize
28:43 Never fly alone
29:30 Hiking down
31:12 Worst moment of my life
32:48 Dreams and plans
Alexey, great conversation! Thanks for the talk and editing, and Russian subs as well!
Alexandre, thank you for sharing your experience and videos! It was really interesting to hear from you about speedflying. The video of flying down through clouds just thrilled me that I grabbed hard my couch!
Hey Alex, thanks for your comment! 🙏
Thank for your videos, a pleasure to watch and lots of interesting tips!
My pleasure! 🙏
Awesome and super informative interview welldone.
Thanks James! 🙏
Just discovered your channel with this video, definitely new sub !
And really enjoyed to have that much info on Alexandre, this guy make me dream , grosse force a lui !
And if you thinking about doing more video like that with other people around speed flying, wingsuit, base , skydive it's could be awesome
@@NomadeCuteur Hey mate, thanks for the feedback! I'm definitely up to doing more, but for now only within speedflying community ✌
Great interview 👍
Thanks! Planning more to come 💪
Nice job, congrats 🤙
Thanks mate!
As an emergency feature. If you are sure 100% that the clouds are not close to the ground. Having a GPS with the landing point and best a clean navigation track is really useful. I use my running watch for that.
I guess it could be really tricky to keep the exact direction being blinded on 6.5m wing when something like GPS is distracting you. I've heard some paragliding pilots do this. But some pilots also died in Oludeniz when their navy tools went wrong in the clouds 😒
@@_albalex Here is the video : ua-cam.com/video/FoATRU9jMlE/v-deo.html&ab_channel=Rippey64 I'm not telling people to do it. I'm saying, if you are stupid/brave enough to do it, better have some tool to help.
Great vid. He mentions a good place to learn in France, afetr the 2 Alpes. Where was that? Didn't quite catch what he said.
Hey, thanks! Alex is mentioning Le Grand Bernard
@@_albalex great thanks for getting back
It was "Le Grand-Bornand" , not Bernard😉
@@nolava3599 that's 100% correct, thanks ☺
howdy?,outstandiing -
Thanks!!
What does he say the good place in the Swiss Alps is?
Lauterbrunnen valley for sure
i dont think Mulle will survive very much longer but of course he loves what he does. His fearlessness is top shelf. Never seen anything like it. Maybe that keeps him alive but unfortunately he is going to catch a rock or a tree going 80 km and then he is going to lose the battle. I appreciate his gung ho spirit and i hope his luck holds out.
Actually this topic is massively covered throughout the interview. There is much bigger chance to "catch a rock" in the beginning of your flying career than later on when you know your wing and how to pilot it much better. So if that particular speed of flying scares the viewer who doesn't fly at this level (or doesn't fly speedwings at all to understand how it works), it doesn't necessarily means the surviving period of highly trained athlete is shorter.
@@_albalex that is very good news that he survived that is great because he is good guy and always helps the young children learn to speed fly