Mexico is a Top destination for Paragliding in the world. Mexico offers dozens of different natural scenarios that are breathtaking. Paragliding is a recreational and competitive flying sport. A paraglider is a free-flying, foot-launched aircraft, sort of a parachute but larger and with different specifications. It is made to provide sustentability. The pilot sits in a harness suspended below a fabric wing, whose shape is formed by its suspension lines and the pressure of air entering vents in the front of the wing.
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The paraglider wing or canopy is usually something known in aeronautical engineering as a ram-air airfoil, or blade parafoil. Such wings comprise two layers of fabric which are connected to internal supporting material in such a way as to form a row of cells. By leaving most of the cells open only at the leading edge, incoming air (ram-air pressure) keeps the wing inflated, thus maintaining its shape. When inflated, the wing's cross-section has the typical teardrop aerofoil shape.
The pilot is supported underneath the wing by a network of lines. The lines are gathered into two sets as left and right risers. The risers collect the lines in rows from front to back in either 3 or 4 rows, distributing load as in a whipletree. The risers are connected to the pilot's harness by two carabiners.
Paraglider wings typically have an area of 20–35 square meters (220–380 sq ft) with a span of 8–12 meters (26–39 ft), and weigh 3–7 kilograms (6.6–15 lb). Combined weight of wing, harness, reserve, instruments, helmet, etc. is around 12–18 kilograms (26–40 lb). The speed range of paragliders is typically 20–60 kilometres per hour (12–37 mph), from stall speed to maximum speed. Beginner wings will be in the lower part of this range, high-performance wings in the upper part of the range. The range for safe flying will be somewhat smaller.
There are several places in Mexico where you can safely practice this sport: