Or is it just going to buckle and collapse and have difficulty staying inflated? I need the absolute minimum windspeed this thing will stay airborne.
I don't remember the brand name(someone else's kite)(not a pansh); but it looked like the one pictured here.
First hand experience with a "big kite" in too much wind creates much respect for the larger kites. Until I experienced it for myself; I had no way
to comprehend or imagine the power or potential of a bigger kite.
I need something that can be flown(preferably buggy in) on those days when there is just barely any wind at all.
Yes but perhaps not very well It'll involve a lot of running backwards to begin
with and make sure you keep the kite moving. I did it with my 12m Ace but it was hard work!
Some fixed bridles will pull in quite low winds, others like more wind.
In the video the wind was barely moving the leaves in the tree tops, never mind the branches. A later check said the wind was 0 - 4 kts on the day
this was filmed, the kite is 10m not 9m.
S
Is it possible to design for strength, if the designer doesn't really understand what strength is?
8m speed wings.
Ozone Samurai 3m
Sky Country Reflex 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10m new 6m!
Sky Country NaSCa 2 11m
Sky Country Alasca 10m - sold
Rhombus Firebee 3m (ret).
Libre Vampir Race Pro 2.6m
Jojo Rage 8m
I have buggied with my 12m Yakuza GT in nearly zero winds. It does take some serious work getting the kite inflated but once you get it in the air
and keep it moving, it creates its own power. You are not going to set any land speed records but you can buggy in the lightest of winds. Each kite
will behave differently and some may work better than others. Your terrain will also have a ton of impact. If you have a ton of resistance then
buggying in light wind will be very difficult. As mentioned, keep the kite moving at all times. If you stall the kite it will become a balled up wad
of nylon on the ground.
Some of us have buggied in 2mph wind with 10m Century II on 160' and 200' lines, it was in clean winds at the beach. Buggy speeds reached 8 to 12mph.
Long lines are not popular north of the border but with the room and some care you can do quite well. I know that you can buggy with a 12.5m Century
II on 25m lines in 2mph.
Appex buggy, Libre hardcore buggies.
Flexboardz. Blokarts.
PKD Century Soulflys. NPW's. Nasa Stars.
A few other less flown oddballs,
Line sets from 10" to 328" or 2m to 100m.
worlds only AQR that works.
North American distributor for PKD.
"Kite Bugging is not an addiction until you try to quit".
Originally posted by bigkid
Long lines are not popular north of the border but with the room and some care you can do quite well.
It is funny you should think that we all like short lines. There are loads of us flying at GP on 25+m lines. Vancouver for the most part has garbage
for wind. Our park is fairly small, so short lines would be nice, but there are obstructions on three sides which make for dirty air on our most
common winds. If you want any kind of clean wind on most days at GP, you had better have longer lines.
S
Is it possible to design for strength, if the designer doesn't really understand what strength is?
8m speed wings.
Ozone Samurai 3m
Sky Country Reflex 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10m new 6m!
Sky Country NaSCa 2 11m
Sky Country Alasca 10m - sold
Rhombus Firebee 3m (ret).
Libre Vampir Race Pro 2.6m
Jojo Rage 8m
Originally posted by Scudley
It is funny you should think that we all like short lines. There are loads of us flying at GP on 25+m lines.
Good to know, only hear about the short lines.
Appex buggy, Libre hardcore buggies.
Flexboardz. Blokarts.
PKD Century Soulflys. NPW's. Nasa Stars.
A few other less flown oddballs,
Line sets from 10" to 328" or 2m to 100m.
worlds only AQR that works.
North American distributor for PKD.
"Kite Bugging is not an addiction until you try to quit".
I need the absolute minimum windspeed this thing will stay airborne.
If you could provide us with a make and model kite I'm sure we could be specific. That being said though I would have to put the number to your
question around 4 or 5 mph. I say that because I'm presuming you would like to launch the kite, fly it to zenith and park it there while you walk
over to your buggy and sit in it. All without it collapsing on you. For that to happen you'll need a good 4 anyway. Of course like the others have
mentioned, you can buggy in next to no wind with efficient kites on smooth surfaces, and most importantly, skill. Back in the mid 90's I remember
being at one of the Wildwood conventions and several guys were flying the old Quadrifoils in the gym with the rest of the indoor flyers. Anything
will fly in basically zero wind but how hard do you want to work? If your looking to park and ride with some basic sining of the kite then 4 is
basically the bottom. Of course if you know the make and model of kite I'm sure others can chime in with their actual experience with that kite.
WHAT I RIDE:
Kite Skates, Libre Full Race, GI Conflict 106, OR Mako 140, Spleene Door 159
What I Am In The Market For: Peter Lynn Vapors, Weatherproof Kite Buggy Bag for Libre, PL or Flexi Small Buggy to Tow With, Flexi Pro Link Handles,
Flexi Lines, Flexi Kite Killers
It is an older kite and has softened up a bit. Yours being used should be similar.
It is NOT the 1st kite up!It needs just a bit more than 1 to fly but needs a bit more to generate power. At about 3 or 4 I can get moving. If I have
space I can build speed and keep going no matter what. In our small parks it isn't that way . You just get moving and it is time to turn.
I have purchased a 10.8 Reactor II because the nine's not cutting it.
Folks I ride with use Vapor 11.2 to 16 and Yak 16
Kites all fly different. Simply saying you have a 9m FB is not going to give somebody accurate enough info to answer what it's bottom end will be. I
can assure you that there will be kites out there that fly earlier. By FLY I mean power you on a ride .
Big kites and low winds = too much like work. IMHO
Yes a 9 meter fixed bridle kite will fly in 1-4mph wind.
However there is so many things involved. Like the make, model and age of the kite. Weight of the kite is a huge factor as well as line length, line
diameter and line weight.
Also the skill of the pilot is a huge variable. Also, what you want to do with the kite makes a big difference.
I can fly many 9 meter kites in 1-4mph. However, someone with little experience would have lots of trouble even getting the kite up.
So give us more info and maybe we can help you out some.
-Scott
Quadrifoil Competition XXXL x2
Quadrifoil Competition XXL
Quadrifoil Competition XM
Quadrifoil Q2000 5 meter
Quadrifoil Q2000 4 meter
Quadrifoil Qebra 3 meter
Flexifoil Blade IV 4.9 meter
Flexifoil Blade 3 10.5 meter
Flexifoil Kava
7\'3\" Hana Crew custom
6\'6\" Hana Crew custom-on Saipan
F-One 7\'3\"
Cabrina 5\'6\"-for sale
2x homebrew plywood wake/kite boards
I regularly fly my KiteSurfer XXXL (9.66m closed cell fixed bridle on 30m lines) in 1-4 mph winds. I get a great workout trying to get it to inflate,
but once it is inflated it is very light so any wind keeps it up and it doesn't deflate in the lulls. You just have to keep it moving to generate a
lot of power in apparent wind. Once you get rolling you can even park and ride.
FB: Pro Foil 5.5m, PL Reactor II 3.5m, Radsail 3m
Depower: GIN Shaman 12m & 6m, Shaman2 9m (incoming), PL Venom II 13m, Venom I 10m
Big kites and low winds = too much like work. IMHO
I agree completely, but I still do it.
S
Is it possible to design for strength, if the designer doesn't really understand what strength is?
8m speed wings.
Ozone Samurai 3m
Sky Country Reflex 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10m new 6m!
Sky Country NaSCa 2 11m
Sky Country Alasca 10m - sold
Rhombus Firebee 3m (ret).
Libre Vampir Race Pro 2.6m
Jojo Rage 8m
power flyin a big kite in next to no wind is a blast. I like to cruise the beach on a landboard w/ my reactorII 8.6m when there isn't enough wind to
buggy.Great low end power