It depends on what you are going to make it as. So, ask yourself are you going to make a circle with holes then you should probably make it without. As, with an oval you could do that too.
The best shape for a parachute is a circle. This is because the circle will have a larger area that will cause more drag to slow the parachute.
For a middle school project, you should design a parachute that is the right size for a small action figure. You can make the parachute out of an old pair of parachute pants.
make a big parachute
The parachute creates drag that opposes the rocket's motion, slowing it down. This drag force is generated as the parachute catches the air and creates turbulence, reducing the rocket's speed.
Make the parachute wider/bigger or make the parachute deeper. Make the thing pulling it down lighter. Hope this helps. =)
Circle circle left right square triangle down up
Yes, increase the constant term to make the circle larger.
The first parachute was made from silk. André-Jacques Garnerin, who invented the parachute in 1797, used a silk parachute to make successful jumps.
if you mean slits has in tears then NO If you do that then your parachute will not work and you`ll die.
the circular parachute 134.88m/s its average descent followed by a parallelogram one
You Make sure your Plane is HIGH enough Altitude, then you with normal default settings / Press Circle "O" to jump out and then after a second or so, Press "X" and you should see a small parachute Icon at the bottom of screen.
The best method is to tape the parachute to the side of the bottle and stuff it inside of the nose cone. The nose cone should have string connecting it to the rocket, yet, the nose cone is not actually taped to the bottle. It should balance on: a) Tabs (Cardboard) b) Just have it firmly on top of the top of the bottle This way, the rocket will soar straight up (hopefully), the nose cone will detach (but stay connected), the parachute will fill up with air and expand, and your successful rocket will sink to the ground at about 2-6 mph.