JP Australia Super Light Wind 90 V154 :
237 x 90cm, 154 liters, Fin Deep Tuttle Slalom-III 56, Gold and Pro Edition
www.windsurfing44.com/matos/JP_Australia/2011/JP_Australia_2011_Super_Light_Wind_90_en.pdf
JP Australia 2011 Single Thruster :
Robby Swift :
From/More : accounts.google.com/ServiceLogin?service=blogger&hl=en-GB&passive=true&continue=https://www.blogger.com/blogin.g?blogspotURL%3Dhttp://windorwithout.blogspot.com/%26zx%3D1rw7o87otzeyw / www.windsurfing44.com/forum/viewforum.php?f=15
...so is it a single, or a thruster, or a single/thruster convertible?
graphics are pure sh!t i recon! not that i'd buy a board because of graphics, but still you want your board to atleast look ok!
www.windsurfing44.com/matos/JP_Australia/2011/JP_Australia_2011_Super_Light_Wind_90_en.pdf
Interesting article as I was just wondering what is the concept difference between my 160L Fanatic Shark Freeride and an equivalent Formula board.
It addresses it a bit but not completely...
Yep graphics don't inspire that's sure....ugly. It is going to be the replacement for the current wave single, except there is the option to take the blocks out and make it a thruster.
Antoine Albeau and Micah Buzianis in action with the JP Australia Super Light Wind 90 V154 Pro et Gold Editions :
Pics Thorsten Indra / www.jp-australia.com
not to be critical of JP but i wish they would stop calling it a new concept.
the pre formula board generation around 98-99 where exactly the same. so it's a 10 year old idea.
So, you getting one Elmo?
I am seriously thinking about it but hate the Blue! Looks like it has an assocoation with the JP funboard range.
PS Rik did a great review...
What, the industry recycling ideas! Who would have thunk it
Back to Thrusters as well. They are so 90's anyway. How many will be coming out next season. Even Robby is doing one
Gesty
Agree, it's not a new concept, but then again what is, just variations on a theme
Kimba
With the amount of sailing I've racked up this autumn on fatty boombalata gear and looking at how that beastie goes it would be a brilliant addition to the collection unfortunately foods taking a priority at present
Loved the ability to pick a direction and just go
Which has greater effect on planing: board width or bigger fin?
Would like to have a super light wind setup, but I am leaning more toward simply throwing a big race fin on, as it is far cheaper.
Better bang for buck with this approach?
Also how would this new JP board handle on a reach, which is what I'd be sailing most in light wind direction?
@westozwind - maybe the marketting team can call JP a green company. they recycle designs.
@panda - reality is either will work.
problem with 70cm fins on standard slalom boards is they have a very short wind range as you can't hold the rail down.
so wide boards are better, they handle the deeper fins better across a wider wind range and have a better drag ratio for the planing surface.
@emo - i'm good with recycling but recycling and saying it's new is false advertising
I don't see the rehash of older course boards at all. This board is all about planing and reaching with smaller sails than you'd normally use on course racing kit. What course board from any period doesn't crave more power and still loves to beam reach as the wind gets up.
If anything it's it's closer to the mega lightwind I-Sonic than anything else as it also focuses on planing and reaching.
iSonic 150: V150* 227.5 long x 93.5 wide
Super Light Wind 90: V154 237 x 90cm
Falcon SL 145: V145 230 x 85
Any thoughts on what differences (performance) there would be between these.
Geez people, watch the vid. This board sits between a freeride board, slalom board and formula board.
VS formula- it is designed to comfortably reach across the wind as well as up and downwind. It isn't designed to use such big fins, has straps in more inboard position and has V throughout. You dont require deep water ports to land and launch from
VS slalom- technically slalom boards end at 85 wide. If there is a slalom series that allows the isonic in fine. The JP is designed to be more user friendly again with longer rocker, V throughout and straps slightly more in board. I dont know if Rik's comment that it goes upwind better than a slalom is true- maybe vs a 85 wide slalom since it can carry a little bigger fin and has longer waterline than most. Alot of the bigger slaloms at the moment aren't that nice to gybe- some you can get up onto the rail, some prefer to be gybed very flat. The slalom still has to have some compromise in range- ie they would all be very similar speed in 8-10knots but at 15knots the slalom will be pulling ahead whereas the JP can focus purely on light wind performance.
VS freeride- slightly better performance on all points. I think Rik should have maybe tried this with a big freeride fin also, but most people can happily use a big slalom fin in 10knots and it really does give the best compromise.
As a concept I think it does sit pretty much on it's own in the market, it is nothing like course/early formula boards which were all pretty unforgiving and ** to gybe. Comparing with starboard it seems somewhere in between the big isonic and the GO.
For 10knot conditions where you aren't looking to race and without having tried it, it seems this would be the ideal board. Maybe it's cross marketing also with a board that is designed to match the light wind freeride sails available at the moment.
^ ok, well lets compare it to a freeride boards then.
the starboard futura 2008 model.
155 249.0 85.0 59.5
exocet sting
158 259 85
so i fail to see how this is a new concept. and for the record, i am not questioning that JP make great boards and from the oones i've used they all gybed very well.
but, there is no doubt in my opinion this is not a new concept. so why call it one. how are consumers supposed to trust manufacturers that easily say stuff to sell boards that isn't true
and for the record the early wide formula boards gybed very well when they weren't used with a 10m sail.
Have it your way then. Better comparisons though as long as they plane as early and have as good speed.
Have you ever been wrong in your opinion?
I'm not trying to cause issues/stir up the debate but I was wondering two things that have relevance to this post.
1. As I have never sailed anything big, why can't you reach on a formula board?
2. Are the Exocet and Starboards that Gestalt mentioned not simply fast free-rides? Much like the old JP Supersport or X-Cite Ride? And therefore the difference with the Super Light Wind is that it's designed to get going in, at a guess, super light winds?
Personally I like the idea of it even though I still wouldn't buy one as I have no sails over 5.7m!
Hmmm... marketing marketing marketing! Afterall it's a board with 4 footstraps and has to be different and better than others to be sold!!!
Seems very similar to the GO Board in a lot of ways...
The GO Board was in essence a de-tuned formula board which was more forgiving to ride, was great to ride on all points of wind and was suprisingly quick!
Ok, so the footstraps on this thing are a bit more in board, but it's hardly a revolutionary concept.
JP Australia 2011 Thruster 74 :
JP Australia 2011 Polakow Twinzer Quad 74 :
Pics from Simon Bassett / Jimmie Hepp / mauisurfreport.blogspot.com