I'm around 93kgs and have found the extra weight (up from my fighting weight of about 86kgs) a real advantage sailing in the open ocean as I feel the board and sail are that much easier to keep on the water and trim respectively. The only disadvantage is that it takes that little bit of extra effort getting up on the plane although maybe I'm just imagining it.
I suppose that's why the speed sailors don weight jackets.
Im 70kg but i have a very physical job as a builder so i really have very little fat all muscle .My wife is 70 kg & on a diet. I think strength would make a greater difference than weight .We both weigh the same but I win in an arm wrestle.
These guys are the ideal windsurfers, their weight varies but their physical ability is obvious. There are no 110 kilo elite wave sailors cause at 110 you're a relatively uncoordinated klutz.. And at 110 you're outside the average weight and nobody can be bothered to make kit for you.
Bjorn was probably about 110kg, and I'd love to see him called any kind of klutz.
Most wave sailors are smaller though, as it is an advantage with smaller kit and boards.
Those are not midgets in the photos. Koster and Brawzinho are not Whippets. Clearly don't know who these 'midjets' are, two of them even sail for GayPryde!!
Put the emphasis on relative klutz. Big long arms are harder to control, the distance from brain to fingertips is further.. Giraffes are spastics compared to Gazelles.
Dunk is 103, dare say a lot lighter when he was competitive in the waves.. And why are you talking about him in the past tense?
Dunkerbeck is a relative Klutz compared to Gollito.. Watch any clip of Dunk even in his youth he muscled everything, same with Brawzinho..
Unrelated, Edvan uses his 4.8 when there are 100kg blokes on 4.2.. He weighs about 60kg.. He uses his 4.8 when I'm hangin onto a 4.2.. power to weight.
I find that about 20kg lighter than me at all times regardless of what my weight is at the time is definitely the best weight for windsurfing. This excuse now allows me to progress really slowly or not at all and always go "dam my weight is holding me back". I can also now argue age as well, this sounds like a winning combination to me lol.
i saw this thread go up... and just knew....
if you are lighter you need to rig a smaller sail then the heavier blokes... it's really a simple concept...
One thing i've noticed is, although there's a relationship between board volume in litres vs your weight in kg, and the amount of wind required to get planing, it's not so easy to pin down exactly.
Example: Me on 145 litres weighing 95kg (a couple of monthe ago; lost much of the excess weight now), with an 8.5. That's a difference of 50 between board volume in litres and rider weight in kg. (50 litres of "extra" volume, not including rig weight, according to my wacky science).
Another guy is on 105 litres, 70 kg, with a 7.5. That's only 35 litres of "extra" volume, 1 metre less of sail area - and the bastard can plane much earlier than I can!
Is there a basic formula (beside's Sod's Law) that can be invoked to explain this?
I'm 95kg-100kg, varies month by month, so took particular interest in this thread.
I'm convinced the relationship of a sailor's weight to their gear in any given wind was simply a matter of ratio eg. small sailor smaller gear and vice-versa. Here's an interesting pdf link to Guy Cribb's BIG mate's rigging (he's 129kg @ 6'1"), an accomplished sailor and specialised speed sailor, interesting read for the bigger guys out there. He basically uses unorthodox methods of rigging to get going.
www.guycribb.com/userfiles/documents/HavingItLarge.pdf
If there was an ideal weight, and it's not yours, what are you going to do about it anyway?!? just get some suitable gear for your weight and get on with it!
Its all due to skill. A more experienced person can hold down bigger sails and get planing sooner on smaller sails than less experienced people.
There's no ideal weight, whatever you want to do you can find a board sail combo to do it.
I've seen a 110kg guy on freestyle gear doing nice moves and a 60kg guy with huge sails doing speed runs.
1. Choose the style of sailing you want to do.
2. Get appropriate gear.
3. Spend more TOW getting good.
There is no excuse for being the "wrong" weight