Had the opportunity to give a 6m WASP a go today in 12 to 15 knots.
My experience is on 4m/5m duotones and a 7m gong.
The 6m wasp is definitely smaller than the 7m gong. I overlayed them and the gong is wider and longer. I didn't think to compare to the 5m duotone, but it feels much bigger.
The wing material reminds me of the stuff they used in the zephyr kite.
Pumped up the wasp and leading edge is bigger than the duotone or gong (it's huge). The centre strut is inflated via thin tube from the leading edge.... the tube is way too thin and it cannot be locked off. Takes time to fill the strut and empty the strut (criticism number 1). The centre strut is used to shape the wing and is fat from start to end. It is as stiff as the duotone boom. There entire wing and boom are stiff and there is no flex. Very similar to the duotone. Whereas the 7m gong flexes a lot and you lose power with the flex.
The wasp is light. Lighter than the gong or duotone and floats nicely on a soft breeze.
(Last criticism)... ****ty cheap nasty thin handles (ozone added the extra side handles and they are STIFF, should have used those on the boom). I plan to attach a solid boom of some sort (paddle probably).
I went out on the AXIS 102 and Naish Hover 125.
Pumping up onto the foil was pretty straight forward. Pumping the wing generates a lot of power (equal to gong). But to my surprise I dragged the wing a bit, pretty sure that is just an experience issue.
Once I got on the foil, I had heaps of power and it was easy to turn it on and off.
Upwind performance was decent. My impression is the duotone is just a tad better, but with more experience there may be little difference.
Coming off the wind was great and wing sat nicely without the duotone fidgeting.
It is powerful little engine and might end up being my biggest wing
Those are my impressions.
Great review I just got the 5 it is awesome. Love the total depower riding a wave no flipping around like the duotone. I have even chucked the wing and riden a wave then picked up the nicely behaved wing at the end. Packs up into a small package , brilliant. Not sure what the thinking is with the small tube to link the leading edge and strut, only negative.
Great review I just got the 5 it is awesome. Love the total depower riding a wave no flipping around like the duotone. I have even chucked the wing and riden a wave then picked up the nicely behaved wing at the end. Packs up into a small package , brilliant. Not sure what the thinking is with the small tube to link the leading edge and strut, only negative.
I do like the small pack up, just not the 5 minutes of strut massage to get the air out.
Great review I just got the 5 it is awesome. Love the total depower riding a wave no flipping around like the duotone. I have even chucked the wing and riden a wave then picked up the nicely behaved wing at the end. Packs up into a small package , brilliant. Not sure what the thinking is with the small tube to link the leading edge and strut, only negative.
I do like the small pack up, just not the 5 minutes of strut massage to get the air out.
The best way to deflate the strut is to stand at the leading edge of the upside down wing. After opening the main valve, you can reach down and pick up the strut by one of the handles. Place the strut between your legs and squeeze like mad with your legs and hands in erratic motions. The thrust and jerking motions seems to do the trick. After a few minutes, the strut will be a limp noodle
Thanks for review. I have Gong 7m and wasp 4.2m, but haven't used them enough yet to really have good feedback.
I did notice yesterday the lack of a stopper on the strut valve -- kind of odd from a kite manufacturer, as these are standard on kites, so that if you lose inflation in main strut you still have at least one strut that floats. However, maybe less important on wing, since you are most likely on a bigger floatier board that you can paddle. Still, if desired this would be an easy add-on.
I was also surprised by the small diameter rubber tube, takes ages to deflate that big centre strut. It's also limp, so it's prone to bending. I am going to replace with a larger spare from one of my kites (or just standard black tubing from hardware store), add the zip ties to connections so it can't come off, and add the isolating stopper.
Great review I just got the 5 it is awesome. Love the total depower riding a wave no flipping around like the duotone. I have even chucked the wing and riden a wave then picked up the nicely behaved wing at the end. Packs up into a small package , brilliant. Not sure what the thinking is with the small tube to link the leading edge and strut, only negative.
I do like the small pack up, just not the 5 minutes of strut massage to get the air out.
The best way to deflate the strut is to stand at the leading edge of the upside down wing. After opening the main valve, you can reach down and pick up the strut by one of the handles. Place the strut between your legs and squeeze like mad with your legs and hands in erratic motions. The thrust and jerking motions seems to do the trick. After a few minutes, the strut will be a limp noodle
Love it ....... worth a video.
Thanks for review. I have Gong 7m and wasp 4.2m, but haven't used them enough yet to really have good feedback.
I did notice yesterday the lack of a stopper on the strut valve -- kind of odd from a kite manufacturer, as these are standard on kites, so that if you lose inflation in main strut you still have at least one strut that floats. However, maybe less important on wing, since you are most likely on a bigger floatier board that you can paddle. Still, if desired this would be an easy add-on.
I was also surprised by the small diameter rubber tube, takes ages to deflate that big centre strut. It's also limp, so it's prone to bending. I am going to replace with a larger spare from one of my kites (or just standard black tubing from hardware store), add the zip ties to connections so it can't come off, and add the isolating stopper.
I was thinking of adding the same isolating stopper that the Gong uses. That way I could essentially just leave the centre strut mostly inflated and pack the whole thing in long bag (exactly what I do with the Gong now to avoid removing the struts).
Thanks for review. I have Gong 7m and wasp 4.2m, but haven't used them enough yet to really have good feedback.
I did notice yesterday the lack of a stopper on the strut valve -- kind of odd from a kite manufacturer, as these are standard on kites, so that if you lose inflation in main strut you still have at least one strut that floats. However, maybe less important on wing, since you are most likely on a bigger floatier board that you can paddle. Still, if desired this would be an easy add-on.
I was also surprised by the small diameter rubber tube, takes ages to deflate that big centre strut. It's also limp, so it's prone to bending. I am going to replace with a larger spare from one of my kites (or just standard black tubing from hardware store), add the zip ties to connections so it can't come off, and add the isolating stopper.
I was thinking of adding the same isolating stopper that the Gong uses. That way I could essentially just leave the centre strut mostly inflated and pack the whole thing in long bag (exactly what I do with the Gong now to avoid removing the struts).
Yeah, I did same for Gong due to the to battens...just leave it long and get a windsurf sail bag.
Thanks for review. I have Gong 7m and wasp 4.2m, but haven't used them enough yet to really have good feedback.
I did notice yesterday the lack of a stopper on the strut valve -- kind of odd from a kite manufacturer, as these are standard on kites, so that if you lose inflation in main strut you still have at least one strut that floats. However, maybe less important on wing, since you are most likely on a bigger floatier board that you can paddle. Still, if desired this would be an easy add-on.
I was also surprised by the small diameter rubber tube, takes ages to deflate that big centre strut. It's also limp, so it's prone to bending. I am going to replace with a larger spare from one of my kites (or just standard black tubing from hardware store), add the zip ties to connections so it can't come off, and add the isolating stopper.
I was thinking of adding the same isolating stopper that the Gong uses. That way I could essentially just leave the centre strut mostly inflated and pack the whole thing in long bag (exactly what I do with the Gong now to avoid removing the struts).
Yeah, I did same for Gong due to the to battens...just leave it long and get a windsurf sail bag.
One of my mates is using a 6 foot surfboard bag for his 5m Gong.
Great review I just got the 5 it is awesome. Love the total depower riding a wave no flipping around like the duotone. I have even chucked the wing and riden a wave then picked up the nicely behaved wing at the end. Packs up into a small package , brilliant. Not sure what the thinking is with the small tube to link the leading edge and strut, only negative.
I do like the small pack up, just not the 5 minutes of strut massage to get the air out.
The best way to deflate the strut is to stand at the leading edge of the upside down wing. After opening the main valve, you can reach down and pick up the strut by one of the handles. Place the strut between your legs and squeeze like mad with your legs and hands in erratic motions. The thrust and jerking motions seems to do the trick. After a few minutes, the strut will be a limp noodle
Would disagree. Watch the end of this vid for pack down, works well
Great review I just got the 5 it is awesome. Love the total depower riding a wave no flipping around like the duotone. I have even chucked the wing and riden a wave then picked up the nicely behaved wing at the end. Packs up into a small package , brilliant. Not sure what the thinking is with the small tube to link the leading edge and strut, only negative.
I do like the small pack up, just not the 5 minutes of strut massage to get the air out.
The best way to deflate the strut is to stand at the leading edge of the upside down wing. After opening the main valve, you can reach down and pick up the strut by one of the handles. Place the strut between your legs and squeeze like mad with your legs and hands in erratic motions. The thrust and jerking motions seems to do the trick. After a few minutes, the strut will be a limp noodle
Would disagree. Watch the end of this vid for pack down, works well
Just make sure you have nothing sharp underneath and/or make the tube larger.
I only had two criticisms of the wing. It's minor compared to the handles, and I can work around it.
Great review I just got the 5 it is awesome. Love the total depower riding a wave no flipping around like the duotone. I have even chucked the wing and riden a wave then picked up the nicely behaved wing at the end. Packs up into a small package , brilliant. Not sure what the thinking is with the small tube to link the leading edge and strut, only negative.
I do like the small pack up, just not the 5 minutes of strut massage to get the air out.
The best way to deflate the strut is to stand at the leading edge of the upside down wing. After opening the main valve, you can reach down and pick up the strut by one of the handles. Place the strut between your legs and squeeze like mad with your legs and hands in erratic motions. The thrust and jerking motions seems to do the trick. After a few minutes, the strut will be a limp noodle
Would disagree. Watch the end of this vid for pack down, works well
Just make sure you have nothing sharp underneath and/or make the tube larger.
I only had two criticisms of the wing. It's minor compared to the handles, and I can work around it.
Larger tube with lock off would be gold. Used to the handles now. My problem is sunscreen, have to clean the hands really well after applying it or very slippery handles
Larger tube with lock off would be gold. Used to the handles now. My problem is sunscreen, have to clean the hands really well after applying it or very slippery handles
I have been using spray-on sunscreen for this reason in summer. Sticks could also be a solution, I use for instance the Run Guard sticks to avoid skin on skin chafing in summer, cleaning hands after using petroleum jelly was a pain.
Just picked up a 5m Wasp so it will be interesting to compare to my 5m Gong.
First comparison the Wasp is a bit smaller overall , about 1 ft shorter span and close to 6in cord.
Wasp has much fatter strut and leading edge, much tighter wing panels and very tight trailing edge.
Other comments as previous posts.
So now to get on the water .
I was tempted to get the 6m Wasp, but think I'm gonna wait a few more weeks for the Gong Pulse to be released. The Pulse will be Gong's third generation wing in less than 9 months, and a 6m Pulse should run about $630 USD delivered to the US versus $930 for the Wasp
First session on 5 and 6m Wasp .
Well hard to call it a session in sub 10kn breeze for a beginner.
However my findings:
Small flimsy handles for my small hands compared to big guys- no issue.
In sub foiling conditions the 6m felt better than the 5m both very light and feel solid.
Both 6 and 5m Wasps feel small for their size.
Compared to my 5m Gong the Wasp span is less however more area at the back outer area of the wing.
The 5m Gong is still a very good contender .
Hopefully good wind tomorrow.
I was tempted to get the 6m Wasp, but think I'm gonna wait a few more weeks for the Gong Pulse to be released. The Pulse will be Gong's third generation wing in less than 9 months, and a 6m Pulse should run about $630 USD delivered to the US versus $930 for the Wasp
Interesting! I bought a Gong first gen 5m on initial release, jumped on the hype bandwagon with both feet, before even any reviews were out. Initial reviews were middling, regarding low end power particularly, and Gong quickly responded with the Pro edition. And now there's a 3rd Generation, just months later? Wow. I got into some online debates about this strategy. Some consider it a positive: responsive designer, always tweaking things, quick improvements. Maybe I am cynical, but to me it seems more negative: insufficient testing, relying on paying clients to be testers, who then end up stuck with quickly obsolete products. Releasing another new version before the older versions are even out there seems to signal a lack of faith in your own product. I don't really want to hack on Gong, as I do like their disruptive DIY ethos. I rationalized it that I paid maybe 60% of the going rate for my wing, so it's like I am on the semi-bro team for the bigger brands, buying at "cost". ;-)
I sold my Gong 5m and then got a can't-pass-up deal on a 7m (gen1), so ended up buying back in. Flying it back to back with my ozone 4.2m, seems the Gong is quite a bit more flappy ... the ozone frame is solid. Looking forward to your testing Warwickl.
Hey Juansesooka, let's face it, we're all guinea pigs in this very new wing a ding thing. Many of us are quickly downsizing our boards, moving to high aspect low profile wings, etc. Even my Duotone wings, which have served me well, are clunky with some significant drawbacks.
Who knows, by the time the new Gong Pulse is released, we might hear about the next generation Duotone wing, and I'll be tempted to wait for that,.......and on it goes
Hey Juansesooka, let's face it, we're all guinea pigs in this very new wing a ding thing. Many of us are quickly downsizing our boards, moving to high aspect low profile wings, etc. Even my Duotone wings, which have served me well, are clunky with some significant drawbacks.
Who knows, by the time the new Gong Pulse is released, we might hear about the next generation Duotone wing, and I'll be tempted to wait for that,.......and on it goes
oh yeah, no doubt...don't get me wrong, I am not bitter about it. Was more just mulling about product release strategies. Companies that are locked into annual releases have negatives too, slow to react OR release a new colour and then hype it as a "game changer". I reckon there's a happy medium in there somewhere.
who then end up stuck with quickly obsolete products. [...] I sold my Gong 5m
You are not stuck, since you can resell it, and at a relatively good price. Expensive gear lose a lot more on resale.
But it allowed you to be on the water progressing rather than waiting.
My friend Arnaud flying on his first session with the WASP 6 M. He was using the Axis Foils 1000 high aspect front wing with the 90 cm mast on a wingboard he made himself: 4'9x23'5 75L
www.facebook.com/SUPnorte/videos/163972191550896/
Don't have any detailed photos of the board. He can start on his knees easily. I think that he weights a bit more that 75 kilos (board is 75 L)
Cool video !
I am interested in getting the 5m for light wind, the 6m looks too big and tricky to handle for a beginner, size wise/catching the water at the bottom ?
Also curious to know the differences between the Axis 1000 and 1020 in terms of top speed and low end.
Update: I am now up to about 20+ sessions on the 6m WASP and it is definitely my light wind option.... The 6m and 4m WASP's will replace the 7m Gong and 5m/4m Duotone wings.
I am now used to the soft handles and I have no dramas with them now.
The pumping up the beast is still a pain (I am sure my 15m Rebel requires less effort).
The draining of air is still slowish. I place the end of the centre strut on my thigh and roll it until all the air is expelled (rather than do it on the ground where sharp objects could puncture the strut).
Update: I am now up to about 20+ sessions on the 6m WASP and it is definitely my light wind option.... The 6m and 4m WASP's will replace the 7m Gong and 5m/4m Duotone wings.
I am now used to the soft handles and I have no dramas with them now.
The pumping up the beast is still a pain (I am sure my 15m Rebel requires less effort).
The draining of air is still slowish. I place the end of the centre strut on my thigh and roll it until all the air is expelled (rather than do it on the ground where sharp objects could puncture the strut).
At 105kg I use the 5m as my "big" wing. Paired with a 2400 front wing I can get up in pretty light wind (10 knots). Don't think I will go bigger as I like the handling of a smaller wing, especially wave riding. Agree about the handles they are a non issue when used to them.
Update: I am now up to about 20+ sessions on the 6m WASP and it is definitely my light wind option.... The 6m and 4m WASP's will replace the 7m Gong and 5m/4m Duotone wings.
I am now used to the soft handles and I have no dramas with them now.
The pumping up the beast is still a pain (I am sure my 15m Rebel requires less effort).
The draining of air is still slowish. I place the end of the centre strut on my thigh and roll it until all the air is expelled (rather than do it on the ground where sharp objects could puncture the strut).
At 105kg I use the 5m as my "big" wing. Paired with a 2400 front wing I can get up in pretty light wind (10 knots). Don't think I will go bigger as I like the handling of a smaller wing, especially wave riding. Agree about the handles they are a non issue when used to them.
At 105kg (lol), I use the 6m Wing and 2000 front wing. I suspect we are probably playing in the same wind ranges.
If AXIS bring out something bigger than their 102 wing, I will have a look at it.