Power Kite Forum

Ozone Access 3m kite only

kite killer - 10-12-2015 at 01:13 PM

New condition 05 Access in sunset colors. $195 free shipping in the U.S. Any depower bar shoul;d work with 4 lines.

kite killer - 10-12-2015 at 01:16 PM



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lceliz - 6-6-2016 at 08:51 PM

Does this kite work with the 2 bars? instead of the bar aswell?

Feyd - 7-6-2016 at 05:09 AM

If you a referring to handles the answer is no. This is a bar dedicated depower kite that uses a trim system and bar. Kites with handles (two small bars) are fixed bridle kites, no depower, no trim system.

This is a great entry level/touring kite. In the 3m size it is a very good high wind kite.

ssayre - 7-6-2016 at 05:25 AM

Quote: Originally posted by Feyd  
If you a referring to handles the answer is no. This is a bar dedicated depower kite that uses a trim system and bar. Kites with handles (two small bars) are fixed bridle kites, no depower, no trim system.

This is a great entry level/touring kite. In the 3m size it is a very good high wind kite.


Hmm, not sure I completely agree. You can fly a depower off handles but you cannot use kite killers and fine tuning the back line tension and handle length is critical.

The short answer is no but the real answer is it's possible and sometimes fun. :)

Look up the difference in depower kites versus fixed bridle. Depower uses a mixer system to alter the angle of attack when brakes applied. Fixed bridle just tucks the bottom edge in and deforms the wing when brakes applied.

abkayak - 7-6-2016 at 05:37 AM

you dont need this yet...but buy it anyway, great colors

lceliz - 7-6-2016 at 06:25 AM

Well eventually I know I want an Access kite was seeing some videos on it. I want to do snowboarding with a kite and sand boarding.
Since the other kite I bought comes with handles I figured if I could put them on this one for a while it would be great till I get a bar.

abkayak - 7-6-2016 at 06:36 AM

no this is kinda a super wind kite...you wont be out in those conditions for a while
but wtf you can buy it anyway...your first dp will be more like a 7-10m depending on things
imo

Windstruck - 7-6-2016 at 06:50 AM

Quote: Originally posted by lceliz  
Well eventually I know I want an Access kite was seeing some videos on it. I want to do snowboarding with a kite and sand boarding.
Since the other kite I bought comes with handles I figured if I could put them on this one for a while it would be great till I get a bar.


Hmmm..... Sand Boarding with a 3m DP. Should get fun once the wind gets over 40 mph....

Honestly, really think hard about when you would use a 3m DP for motive power, especially if what you want to do involves a fair amount of friction to slide, like sand boarding. The higher the friction to move the more kite you need up in the air to get going and keep going. Please don't get me wrong, I love the Access kite (I own a 6m and want to also own a 4m) and really like them for Snowkiting. I want the 4m for when I'm too scared to launch the 6m. It has to be howling for me not to dare launch the 6m and I'm talking Snowkiting which offers much less sliding friction compared to sand boarding (I'm assuming here that sand boarding would be something akin to snowboarding on sand). A 3m Access would unlikely provide sufficient power to overcome the friction of the sand until the wind is practically gale force.

hiaguy - 7-6-2016 at 06:59 AM

This kite was sold in February.
No more "too much wind" days for me :wee:

BTW: I received it crispy-new.
Also snagged a bar from BeamerBob.
Both were shipped faster than I expected and exactly as described. Thanks guys!

abkayak - 7-6-2016 at 07:07 AM

nice score Howard, would love to try it...or have the need to

WELDNGOD - 7-6-2016 at 07:16 AM

Iceliz, it works like this : Fixed bridle Ram Air Parafoil = Are highly efficient at making power. In fact they are all power all the time, you control the amount of power by how and where in the wind window you fly it. If you do the wrong thing at the wrong time, something bad may happen ,or your skills may allow you to fly it out. De-power on the other hand are not as efficient at making power, this is why they are so large compared to foils (there are some exceptions to this like DP closed cell foils) . The DPs change the AOA of the kite to make it get more/less bite in the wind . Think of it as a gas pedal in a car, pull on the bar generate power, let it out it goes away. But the kites are specific in design ,they aren't interchangeable.

lceliz - 7-6-2016 at 08:28 AM

So would this kite style be good for like a buggy Vs a snowboard?

OffAxis - 7-6-2016 at 09:00 AM

It should work for either when the conditions are nuts out 20-30+knots. I was out snow kiting with my HQ Rush Pro 350 3.5m in 15-20mph winds and it made me nervous. I can't imagine what 30mph looks/feels like.

As a beginner, steady wind speeds from 0-15mph are you friend. Find kites that will accomplish what you want to do in those wind ranges to start. I got my HQ Apex 7.5m becuase I want to snowkite in wind speeds in the low teens. As a gain more experience, I will push it more towards 20mph.

lceliz - 7-6-2016 at 09:18 AM

I flew the 1.8 in 26 to 32 there was a storm coming from the coast to the desert with rain clouds it was so much fun. It pulled me for a short time but would have it go back to the 12 o clock position when I need to relax since the kite would stay with less power there. It was a fun experience flying it at that speed made it turn faster and respond quicker.

WELDNGOD - 7-6-2016 at 09:25 AM

You can't compare that 1.8 to any of the kites we are talking about. It taught you a tiny lil bit about what these kites are going to do. It's apples and oranges. You are going to be surprised at the power just a 3m beginner foil will generate. Learn all you can from it ,then try something larger or higher AR or even a DP. But ,you could get spanked and say screw it. So I wouldn't buy a bunch of gear yet. You need to figure out the whats and wheres.

lceliz - 7-6-2016 at 10:11 AM

Yeah I'm aware that there is more surface area which will provide more lift or pull. I'll just take it slow till I get a 3m

Windstruck - 7-6-2016 at 10:53 AM

Quote: Originally posted by lceliz  
So would this kite style be good for like a buggy Vs a snowboard?


This is sort of a personal preference issue, particularly for buggying. For snowkiting it seems most folks have gravitated towards some sort of DP set up. For me personally, I prefer DP for both buggying and snowkiting. I'm in my mid-50s and really am crash adverse at this point and DP gives me the sort of control I'm looking for to scrub power when I want to.

Some of this depends on where you intend to get moving. If you are relegated to soccer fields and the likes you have to be aware of non-movable obstacles such as goal posts, lights, bleachers, etc. It will absolutely wreck your day or worse if you slam into those sorts of things moving at the kind of speeds that are easily generated in these activities. I was flying FB last year and a gust dragged me sideways into a large soccer goal post. I was luck to get out of that one with just some serious cuts, bruises, and ego blunting. It could have been way, way worse.

DP isn't going to eliminate all risks but it will allow you under control to really scrub power when your sphincter is puckering (like mine does a lot).

Good luck with all this. And yes, respect the 3m FB. That's plenty enough kite to thrash you with the right combination of wind and pilot error.

Feyd - 7-6-2016 at 11:29 AM

Quote: Originally posted by ssayre  
Quote: Originally posted by Feyd  
If you a referring to handles the answer is no. This is a bar dedicated depower kite that uses a trim system and bar. Kites with handles (two small bars) are fixed bridle kites, no depower, no trim system.

This is a great entry level/touring kite. In the 3m size it is a very good high wind kite.


Hmm, not sure I completely agree. You can fly a depower off handles but you cannot use kite killers and fine tuning the back line tension and handle length is critical.

The short answer is no but the real answer is it's possible and sometimes fun. :)

Look up the difference in depower kites versus fixed bridle. Depower uses a mixer system to alter the angle of attack when brakes applied. Fixed bridle just tucks the bottom edge in and deforms the wing when brakes applied.


Admittedly, some kites, like the Peak, can be flown on handles TO SOME EXTENT but it will not (the Peak included) provide the performance that the kind is capable of or intended. To the best of my knowledge the only kite brought to market with either a handle or depower bar option was the F-arc. And only because the F-arc depower was pretty minimal if at all. :smilegrin:

In terms of the debate between depower and fixed bridle. The vast majority of land based kiters especially the older crowd (no offense) are by and large dedicated to fixed bridles. The exceptions tend to be riders who live in gusty areas but very few buggy drivers in this forum, until recently, have started to delve into depowers.

For snow kiting very few people ride fixed bridle. Unless they live somewhere that has minimal gust factor and fairly consistent surface conditions. (Meaning not a mix of fast firm then deep pow).

Ozone has abandoned fixed bridles. HQ now offers a 3m trainer that is fully depower. FLYSUFRER is making 2.5m depower trainers. There's a reason I suspect.

If you live in a place with crazy steady winds and consistent surface, having depower isn't going to be much benefit. Beyond the economics of a depower covering 2-3 X the wind range of a fixed bridle. But very few of us live in those areas.fwiw

lceliz - 7-6-2016 at 08:43 PM

Well at some point I plan to go to Mammoth in California so not sure what the wind conditions are out there since I never gone but thats where a lot of people head out too in the winter season. Any way to know what the wind conditions are at a place that is reliable?

Feyd - 8-6-2016 at 03:29 AM

Local intel is always the best bet. Speaking to people who live and ride there. Or at least live there. This forum may have some members that have ridden there and can offer some insight. If you can't find kiters the next best option is ice fishing forums.

Google Earth is a helpful tool as well if you have a solid understanding of how wind works and interacts with topography. When I go somewhere new I scout it on Google Earth to see what might work or not in a given wind direction. It's not perfect but it helps a lot.

If you are going somewhere new monitor the weather stations at or near your target. Note the consistency of conditions over time. This will also give you some idea what to expect.

At the end of the day the bottom line is "you don't know if you don't go" and you sometimes just need to risk either getting skunked, getting nuked or having primo wind and garbage surface. That's the name of the game in kiting. But more often than not thins work out and you get some kind of session in and no matter what, you learn something. And the more you learn the easier it all gets.

There's no substitute for experience.

MotoFoo86 - 8-6-2016 at 03:21 PM

Ice fishing forums do not work on the west seaboard, especially Cali. Our lakes rarely freeze hard enough to fish on. I would say s 3m is probably not going to have the grunt for the snow conditions in the mammoth area unless the winds are really cranking. Keep in mind Alpine winds are indeed thinner and therefore generate less pull than lower elevation winds. I fly a size bigger foil on my local mountains than I would an lei on the coast

I suppose the exception of the ice fishing forum might be Alaska or parts of Canada but ice fishing isn't really a thing in Oregon, Washington, California.

Feyd - 8-6-2016 at 05:08 PM

HA! Sorry, spaced that we were talking California. :P

lceliz - 8-6-2016 at 05:38 PM

So the 5 meter would do fine at mammoth then to pull me up the mountain? Considering there is an up wind? I asked a Co worker how the winds where when she went and she said there was no strong wind but no idea the speed.

Windstruck - 8-6-2016 at 06:06 PM

You will need STRONG wind to get pulled uphill with 5m of DP sail I'm afraid. 5m DP is still considered a high wind kite. If winds are "steady and brisk" but not howling I suspect you'd want at least 8-9m of kite. I've never been kiting in Mammoth but I do live in the UT mountains and snowlike at altitude somewhat similar to where you are talking.

There are guys here on PKF that do a lot of snowkiting in CO. They may be able to comment.

abkayak - 8-6-2016 at 06:29 PM

I'd be shocked if theirs kiting on Mammoth...is this confirmed?

lceliz - 8-6-2016 at 08:33 PM

They dont allow kitting in Mammoth? Well there goes that idea if they dont.

Windstruck - 8-6-2016 at 09:24 PM

Quick search on YouTube found this:


abkayak - 8-6-2016 at 09:36 PM

That seems more like near, or by Mammoth
Not that I know...but that's not a Mt. for sure
Steve do they let you fly anywhere on trail in Ut.?
Ive been wondering about this in the US in general

Windstruck - 8-6-2016 at 10:30 PM

Quote: Originally posted by abkayak  
That seems more like near, or by Mammoth
Not that I know...but that's not a Mt. for sure
Steve do they let you fly anywhere on trail in Ut.?
Ive been wondering about this in the US in general


I am far from an authority on all things UT, but I would say no. The Snowkiting in UT takes place in some vast open spaces but not in bounds at any ski resort that I am aware of. Folks do Snowkite in an area that is sort of off the back side of Deer Valley but it is far from in bounds. Folks that kite there in the winter either skin in or come in by snowmobile and then ski.

This makes sense really in the same way as in general folks don't kiteboard where folks free swim. In bounds skiing and Snowkiting just wouldn't mix at all.

Feyd - 9-6-2016 at 03:30 AM

Powder Mountain is the only ski area that allows kiting to the best of my knowledge and within certain restricted areas only. .Mammoth does not.

You do not want to be kiting amongst skiers. Honestly bI snow kite to get away for what passes as skiers and boarders on the slopes!

Nor would I recommend snow kiting on slopes or inclines as a beginner.


Feyd - 9-6-2016 at 03:34 AM

http://www.powdermountain.com/en/tickets-and-passes/lift-rat...

Feyd - 9-6-2016 at 03:34 AM

$20 for snow kitershttp.

://www.powdermountain.com/en/tickets-and-passes/lift-rates/

Windstruck - 9-6-2016 at 06:11 AM

That's awesome Chris! Powder Mountain would be the place to do this. It is sort of a whacky, Old School sort of place quite a ways from other resorts, most certainly off the beaten path. Snow Basin is not too far from there, but it is decidedly separate from it's more mainline cousins such as Alta, Snowbird, Park City, Deer Valley, etc.

As noted, I'm no expert when it comes to all things Utah. Last season was my first for Snowkiting and I'm still just starting to spread my wings!

I'm excited to learn of this excellent option only about 90 minutes drive from my house!

soliver - 9-6-2016 at 06:30 AM

Quote: Originally posted by Windstruck  
You will need STRONG wind to get pulled uphill with 5m of DP sail I'm afraid. 5m DP is still considered a high wind kite.


Hey, I think Iceliz is referring to the 5m Ozone Flow in his siggy (which is FB), so that would be markedly different from a 5m DP... just sayin'

iceliz, I understand that snow kiting with a fixed bridle kite (like your 5m) is difficult, but I can't truly comment because here in Georgia, snow usually comes in the form of rain :D

Windstruck - 9-6-2016 at 07:14 AM

Spencer makes an excellent point regarding the amount of force a FB would make at 5m versus a 5m DP. That being said, I for one wouldn't be caught dead Snowkiting in 3-D terrain with a setup like that. That could be the 55 year old in me talking but DP is pretty darn need-to-have when dealing with all the stuff you need to deal with when Snowkiting IMHO, particularly in terrain which is a whole lot more advanced (read dangerous) than cruising back and forth on a frozen soccer field for example.

Maybe you could find some simple flat surfaces like snow covered soccer fields to test everything out and get really comfortable with your total setup before venturing out into the Wild. Once in the true Outback, please appreciate that a whole new set of very real issues present themselves such as Avalanche dangers, etc.

lceliz - 9-6-2016 at 07:41 AM

Well might stay away from the snow then till the following year.
In the mean time ill get familiar with what I have.

abkayak - 9-6-2016 at 08:11 AM

i did a week at Powder Mt BK (before kites) interesting place...i could understand quasi in bounds kiting there

soliver - 9-6-2016 at 10:17 AM

All of this from a for sale thread :lol:

kite killer - 17-6-2016 at 04:44 PM

Just chimed in after a hiatus
WHo knew a baby kite would stir things up. What!