I've been sailing for too long with little improvement and at least need to start planing out of almost every gybe. So it's time to fire-up with some decent information and practice.
Do you have any good links for the best 'how to gybe guides'?
Both videos and text is good. Both waveboard gybes and slalom gybes is good.
My best tip....that I never follow for fear of falling off.....rotate the sail super,super early.
It does make balance much more difficult----but if you can stay upright (not fall off) it will help you no end to come out planing.
These tips really helped me consistently plane out of gybes:
boards.co.uk/technique/3-carve-gybe-tips-for-planing-exits-every-time.html
Guy Cribb - keep referring to it as you progress. Good dry land practise and breaks it up into millions of pieces!
boardseekermag.com/lifestyle/DVD-review-intuition_026/
Here's a good simple one with some tips for planing out of the gybe by Nick Dempsey
boards.co.uk/news/videos/3-carve-gybe-tips-for-planing-exits-every-time.html
Yep, Sam Ross is my go to man for youtube tuition.
I love his laydown gybe video. Watched this a 100 times (I still can't gybe though)
Here's my problem. Flip early, I get pulled in over the front. Flip late, I end up turning upwind and dropping off the plane. Can't seem to find the middle ground. Any tips??
Go in fast and flip early, but just let the rig swing free and rotate in front of you. There is no power in it. If it is pulling you, you are going in too slow.
Here is my main gybe which is NOT the step gybe shown in the above videos, but can and usually does include a brief lay down of the sail.
There's some great advice in this thread! I'm like Harrow with the power issues on rig flip. I will take some of the advice above and try harness the power after rig flip. Would like to try Kato's strap to strap in higher wind.
PS- Nigel, with a near 23 knot alpha, I think your gybes are going ok
Could the problem with exits actually start with the entry? If you aren't going flat out, crouched down and really pulling on the sail, you won't have enough speed through the gybe and the sail will have too much force on it for a comfortable exit. Pure guesswork but if you go in at 20 knots, lose 10 knots through the turn, you are only going at 10 at your slowest. Not planing in other words.