No.
There I was at 30,000 feet, ready to jump into thin air... when suddenly my parachute opened while I was still in the plane! Summitters relish hiking into thin air. Vanishing into the fog is like vanishing into thin air.
Because you didn't have a parachute, you had a couple of choices. You could stay in your plane and burn alive. You could jump thousands of feet to your death, or you could take the quick and easy out by shooting yourself in the head.
30,000 feet
Captain Albert Berry is one of two people credited as the first person to make a successful parachute jump from a powered aeroplane. The other contender is Grant Morton, who is reported to have jumped from a Wright Model B flying over Venice Beach, California sometime late in 1911. On 1 March 1912, Berry jumped from a Benoit pusher biplane from 1,500 feet (457 m) and landed successfully at Jefferson Barracks, Missouri. The pilot was Tony Jannus. The 36 foot (11 m) diameter parachute was contained in a metal canister attached to the underside of the plane - when Berry dropped from the plane his weight pulled the parachute from the canister. Rather than being attached to the parachute by a harness Berry was seated on a trapeze bar. According to Berry he dropped 500 feet (152 m) before the parachute opened.
if u can still c the air craft it is about 1000 feet of altitude
The highest fall survived without a parachute is approximately 33,000 feet. Vesna Vulović, a flight attendant from Serbia, holds the record for surviving a fall from that height after a plane explosion in 1972.
1350/depth of the concrete in feet
Typically, a plane reaches an altitude of around 10,000 to 15,000 feet before a skydiver jumps. This height allows for a safe freefall duration and adequate time for the parachute to deploy. Some experienced skydivers may jump from higher altitudes, such as 18,000 feet or more, to extend their freefall experience.
He flied there by plane, jumped with parachute which didn't opened and ended up on the bottom of the lake.
Indoor skydiving is proven safer then actually jumping out of an airplane at 3,000 feet. It is significantly cheaper than real skydiving and it is safer without the need for a parachute or a plane.
fact
Opening a parachute above 6,000 feet can be risky because the higher altitude means the parachute may not have enough time to fully deploy and stabilize before reaching the ground. Additionally, opening a parachute too high can lead to longer free fall times, increasing the chances of encountering turbulence or wind shear. Most experienced jumpers and safety guidelines recommend deploying the parachute between 3,000 and 5,000 feet to ensure a safe and controlled descent.