PC Pitch and consistent off-headings
I get a lot of left off headings. I've been trying to sort out the reasons as to why for a long while now. I really do not believe it is packing related (but I'm not swearing it off). I have flat packed my rig on both sides and and intentionally worked through both sides of my packjob in different orders and get the same results. I have solid outside video of exits and deployments and believe my shoulders are pretty level, way more level and stable than deployments I've seen from jumpers doing sketchy gainers, and they still wind up with good headings. I also don't get off-headings from static-line jumps or handheld jumps. The offheadings stem from stowed deployments.
After years of jumping the only thing I can pin these left off-headings on is an aggressive PC pitch. It's hard wired into me to pitch that sucker hard and from what I understand the general wisdom is to always throw the PC hard. From videos I have of deployments, this aggressive PC pitch throws the PC far to the right, then as it inflates it swings back left from the momentum and is usually a bit off to the left of my body for extraction. My sample size isn't large for this statement...
I would love to hear some opinions on whether or not a hard PC pitch would lead to consistent off-headings. Is throwing the PC 'not too hard' something that goes through your mind for a jump? And those of you who have logged jumps and heading directions, is one heading direction more common than the other?
I don't log my jumps in a detailed fashion, I'm starting to wish I had. But I can say with some confidence that over 25% of my stowed deployments lead to ~90 degree left off-headings.
I have jumped a BJ with a ring-vented Bad Seed PC in the past, I currently jump an OSP with an Asylum Toxic PC. I have had similar results with both combinations.