I know this topic has been done to death, but when I came in at a beginners spot so many people wanted to know how to. Please add things Ive missed.
1) Go fast... Dip your kite hard low and get it back in the window and bear down-wind between a broad reach and your normal upwind tack. This will give you speed, the more speed the better transference of inertia. (Make sure no one is downwind of you for a long time)
2)As you are about to launch, 3 things to consider..... bring your kite to lunch as quick as you can WITHOUT taking any tension off the lines, this creates inertia from forwards to up.
This is about edging slightly higher into the wind before take-off and not turning any bow-SLE too quickly.
Second, its load and pop- Most places theres chop, a perfect launch gives you another 3-6m. Keep the kite at 45, adjust the angle up and just pop off chop . See how high you can get without sending the kite..
Next one, you cant boost big on a 12m kite in 20-30knots, unless you weigh 130kgs. When you depower a kite it flys so far forward in the window, and has such massive drag, you are flying an unresponsive luffing piece of crap.
Hey
thanks for this! im only a newbie and not quite up to this stage yet, however I was just curious.. should you only try jumps when the kite is not depowered, as this create slack in the lines (and I assume that is not desired as you dont wanna take tension of the lines)?
sorry if this is a bit of a stupid question
keep the advice coming!
cheers Elise
hey elise, you can boost with depower pulled in on your kite, however you'll find it doesn't behave quite like it should be. A better idea (if you're a bit over-powered) is to power up, and not pull in your bar so much as you jump. Will lift you higher obviously but should float you down softer aswell.
Great ideas Dave. Tension in the lines, yeh that's the key it seems. Watching my bro the other day and he edges too hard too soon.
Love anything on how to Boooost!
No nooo he definately means 20-30 knots.... matty's just a ****ing nutcase >.<
I dunno, this topic just has too many variables! On a whole definately something to follow, but every kite is different! A big one to add to this is to get used to the power of the kite in the conditions, if your not edging right up till the kite yanking you off the water then you just fly downwind. If you crank your kite from too low as well same effect, its all dependent on the conditions! Also, if your hitting a kicker in the surf, you gotta time it so your getting pulled off your edge at the lip, but also want to be getting pulled up the face.
The tricky bit isnt going big its coming down well! Anything over the 10m mark pretty much have to loop out of (that I've found anyways), else you just dip your ass in the water.
Just seeing if anyone here has experienced same **** but on ONE of my kites I have found that the way to get the most height out of the kite was to totally release centerline tension up to the point of taking off the water (with a massive downwind carve). But every other kite (all C-shaped) have been as you have described... much speed as possible, send hard from 10 to 2 then correct on ascent...
Nah mate not taken the wrong way gib, Any your 18knot QLD wind for me was 12m weather. 18knots in Perth, a 9-10 is the same power....
And yes eric, sheet out just enough to keep tension on the lines and sheet in at 12 or a little over depending on your kite, sheet in and POP.
Chop slows you down. Big chop makes jumps so hard to time.
bs i weigh 90 kgs and can boost huge up to 28 knts on my 12m but prefer 9m over 22knts. so not true!!!!