Are you ready to up your wingsuit game to the next level? Mount Wingsuit 2 has everything that made the original great, plus all it needs to be the definitive wingsuit VR app. There is a whole new mountain, new game modes geared towards multiplayer, and a vast, open world that transitions seamlessly between offline and online content.

We have developed a brand new flight model, built from the ground up for use with tracked controllers. This makes for an intuitive flight experience, where you move effortlessly through air that you can positively feel as you touch it. The experience is enhanced by 9 unique wingsuits, each with distinctive flight characteristics and feel, providing you with unmatched variation and granularity.


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When you get tired of the adrenaline rush, you can sit back and go for a relaxed cruise around the mountain. There are countless nooks and crannies for you to explore and more Easter eggs than you can shake a stick at. The map is based on the craggiest American mountain ranges, compressed and heavily edited for your wingsuit enjoyment, so that every valley has a sick line in store.

last night i 3d printed a mudflap to stick an old alti on. 


if im honest i dont really check it as i use the audible, i need to get a second one. 


i'm thinking of modifying the mount to take my viso 2 wrist mount. 


edit: AON2 do a really fancy looking alti if you've got 300GBP just laying about

I recently got into wingsuiting and during my FFC I used the Bonehead mudflap altimeter mount with a Galaxy. It worked fine, but I dont like analog altimeters that much (unless it's a Stella or Alt Track) 


Anyway, I have a Viso2 on a wrist mount. I am trying to figure out if there is way I could reuse that. The rig is not being used only for WS. I want to be able to do a WS jump, pull the WS off and then hop on a 4-way jump or something like that. As such, I dont know that the Viso pillow that L&B makes will work as it would be a PITA to switch the Viso between mounts all the time. 


So is there a way I can reuse the wrist mount and mount that on a mudflap or chest mount somehow, or should I just buy a second Viso or Stella and use that for WS jumps?

Obviously my project isn't a commercial one, but I am using augmented reality glasses and sensors and a Micro Controller Unit to display altitude information (among other data) visually in front of my eyes in a Heads Up Display (like fighter pilots use). 


What I found really cool about using this system is that I have the altitudes color coded so that in addition to seeing the numeric readout, I have the numbers in Green, Yellow, Or Red depending on the altitude range. 


One day, helmets will have visors that have this set up or something similar, to eliminate having to wear wrist mounts or chest mounts.

I wonder if depending on bluetooth during a skydive would be feasible, especially if you could house all the actual hardware inside a small box mounted on the outside of your helmet, which routes to the OLED screen inside your visor.......

oh, i don't know about that. i just got an aon2 brilliant pebbles and it has 20 programmable alarms on it that you can set to count down every 1000 ft and it only cost $100. You have to program it with a computer or smartphone app but hey, for that price, i can get 3 and have them all pre-programmed. of course i would rather just use the phone, but then i am also into making my own altimeter/logbook that will record all sorts of data on each jump. i one were to make a wrist mounted altimeter using a raspberry pi with a gps module, you could have it sending an output to google glass i think.

In May, Joby Ogwyn is set to take a heart-stopping leap off the world's tallest peak in a custom-made wingsuit, outfitted with cameras so that viewers can watch the 10,000-vertical-foot jump live on the Discovery Channel.

In this photo distributed by MIURA Dolphins Co., 80-year-old Japanese extreme skier Yuichiro Miura stands atop the summit of Mt. Everest as he becomes the oldest person to climb the world's tallest mountain on May 23, 2013.

After returning to Camp 2, located at about 6,000m up the mountain, Howell decided to strap on his wingsuit and go for the jump. While the British veteran of wingsuiting has pulled off BASE jumps around the world, flying off Aconcagua on Dec. 29 meant something special to him.

The L&B Viso Wedge Mount has webbing sewn to the backside of the mount that has two channels built in for routing your chest strap: one for Type-17 (narrow) and Type-8 (wide). These two channels have a rubberized gripper surface to help keep the mount from moving and sliding on your chest strap.

You have eight wingsuits at your disposal, using an advanced aerodynamic model to give each suit its unique look and feel, and twenty drop points to unlock and explore. With 320 objectives spread across 650 square kilometers of mountains loosely based on the Rockies, all in an open world packed with unique features, this game leaves you with miles to go.

The first recorded ascent of Baring Mountain was on July 28, 1897, by John Charlton and Albert H. Sylvester. However given the nontechnical nature of the easiest ascent route a much earlier Native American ascent is possible. The standard route on the mountain is the Northwest Ridge Route, involving hiking (off-trail, some of it through brush) and a small amount of scrambling at the top.

The first BASE jump off Baring Mountain was done by Todd Higley and Josh Whipple, in August 2001. Michael McMurtrey, of Seattle, was the first to jump from Baring using a wingsuit, in June 2004.[citation needed]

We entered the park through the main gate, allowing me to experience a different side of the mountain to my first trip. That route from three years ago was littered with old rubber soles from hardy porters and guides, but this trail was frequented by buffalo. Our porter, Steve, led the way at a steady pace, as our heavy loads crushed our shoulders. On the final leg, the sun set behind us, silhouetting the eerie shrubs in the valley. I paused to admire the view, literally lost for words as the altitude and the 35kg pack crushing my diaphragm took my breath away.

We opted for an alpine start, aiming to be at the base of the climb as the sun was rising. We stumbled out of our campsite, the moon in the clear sky illuminating our path. The southern gully of Point John is equal in quality and aesthetics to any mountaineering route in my local playground of Mont Blanc. The fact that I was in Africa, looking down onto a glacier, just added to the atmosphere of this route. I climbed with a rope, but put myself in the mindset of soloing the route, checking every hold and remembering any moves. I wanted to be as confident as I could for my climb back up after the flight.

I dumped my gear back at the tent, only keeping my helmet, harness and abseil device. I looked back up to the peak where I had just jumped from. I felt the first wave of accomplishment, but the day was not over. I was looking forward to seeing Ewan again, and we could only celebrate when we were both back down at base camp. After three years of planning, I had finally succeeded in my goal of becoming the first person to wingsuit BASE jump in Kenya.

The trio made up of Fred Fugen, Vincent Cotte and Aurlien Chatard, achieved the longest wingsuit flight in history: They flew 7.5 km long above Mont-Blanc in 3 minutes from 5 seconds, flying over glaciers, ice cracks and cliffs.

"This is also what we wanted to highlight on this video" said the wingsuit pilot Frdric. "We could not have such precise trajectories on such long flights if we could not give ourselves precise indications like here. Communication has really brought a big evolution in our sport, as for airplane pilots."

Russian mountaineer and BASE jumper Valery Rozov has performed a number of historic feats, including\u2014on the eve of the 60th Anniversary of the first ascent of Everest\u2014a record-setting jump from Mount Changtse of the Himalayas in 2013.

Climbing Uhuru, the highest peak of Mount Kilimanjaro took five days, and it took another two days for Rozov to find a suitable point for jumping. He also had to wait for perfect weather to make his historic wingsuit flight. Kilimanjaro is the highest free-standing mountain in the world. As soon as the sun is up, cloudiness naturally appears around the mountain's summit. Wingsuit jumps can only be performed in clear weather, so it is possible to get a \u201Cclear window\u201D only in the early morning.

You will experience 2 flights in a total of 3 minutes: 1 flight with only the wingsuit on and 1 with both wingsuit and VR goggles on.

The same amount of flight time as jumping 2 times from an aircraft at 4 km altitude.

The whole exciting visit with us lasts for about an hour. be457b7860

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