Airplane wingsuit formation
Airplane wingsuit formation is a sub‑discipline of wingsuit flying in which wingsuit pilots exit an aircraft or jump from a cliff and fly a predetermined formation in close proximity to the jump plane. Developed from experimental stunts in the late 1990s, AWF matured in the 2010s into an organised niche of air‑sports with documented record attempts and safety protocols.
History
Pioneering flights (1997 – 2016)
- In July 1997 French wingsuit pioneer Patrick de Gayardon jumped from a Pilatus PC-6 Porter over Chamonix and—after a short glide—flew back into the same aircraft, demonstrating the first documented “plane‑re‑entry” with a modern wingsuit.
- Between 2013 and 2016 several European wingsuit teams conducted informal formation flights alongside Pilatus PC-6 and Cessna jump planes in France and Spain, laying the groundwork for standardised exit order, reference speeds and vertical separation. Coverage of those early gatherings appeared in ParaMag and regional aviation media.
“A Door in the Sky” (2017)
On 13 October 2017 the French duo Fred Fugen and Vincent Reffet BASE jumped from the 4,158 m Jungfrau in the Swiss Alps and successfully re‑entered a light aircraft in flight, after more than 100 training sorties of plane‑to‑wingsuit‑to‑plane formation flying.Although primarily a BASE‑jump stunt, the training programme formalised many of the safety margins later adopted by AWF organisers.
Organised record attempts
| Year | Location | Aircraft | Planned wingsuiters | Status / size | Primary organiser |
| 2018 | Portimão, Algarve, Portugal | 1 × PC‑6 Porter, 1 x Cessna 208 | 14 | **First recognised AWF world record** – 14‑way formation, 23 Dec 2018 | Daniel Ossio |
| 2019 | Elbląg, Poland | 2 × Turbo Finist SMG‑92 | 18 | **Second world record** – 18‑way, 25 Aug 2019 | Daniel Ossio, Piotr Walasek |
| 2021 | Schlierstadt, Germany | Pilatus PC-6 | 9 + 1 camera | German national AWF record – 9‑way | Daniel Ossio |
- Record sizes refer to the number of wingsuit pilots stably linked to the aircraft or to one another for ≥5 s while remaining within 10 m lateral distance and 30 m longitudinal separation, per the community rule‑set published by Ossio .*
Technique and safety
AWF organisers typically brief three distinct phases:- Staggered exit – wingsuiters leave the aircraft in a planned and quick way to speed up the formation build-up.
- Formation build – pilots adopt a shallow descent while wingsuiters accelerate to match and build up the formation.
- Break‑off / optional re‑entry – at a planned altitude wingsuiters slow down to safe separation or, for re‑entry, synchronise with the aircraft’s slipstream and enter.
Involved airplanes
To date, the following unmodified airplane types have been flying with unpropelled wingsuiters:- Pilatus PC-6 Porter
- Cessna 208 Caravan
- PAC P-750 XSTOL
- Technoavia SM92 Finist Turbo Finist
- PZL-104 Wilga
- Dornier Do 28
See also
- Aerial refueling – analogous closure problems