thrasher
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Registered: 20-7-2011
Location: Bridgewater, Ma
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Mood: Looking for wind....Cant see it anywhere!
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Depower
quick question... is there any difference between a depower kite and a kite such as the rush 3 pro with the third line brake line? if so what is the
difference? or is the rush pro considered a depower? thanks for any help i get.
-chris
Peter Lynn Vibe 2.6
Prism Stylus P3 Ice
HQ Rush III Pro
HQ Rush III
Twister II 5.6
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awindofchange
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The difference is as wide as apples and oranges.
The Rush 3 Pro is a fixed bridled kite that has been designed to fly on 3 lines and a bar. The overall controls for left and right are basically the
same as the depowers, but that is about as close as you can get. Similar to saying apples and oranges are both fruit.
Depower kites should probably be called active adjustable bridle kites - this may help distinguish between depower and fixed bridle. Basically, fixed
bridle kites have a fixed bridle, meaning that the bridle is pre-set at its optimum performance and power level from the factory and is not
adjustable. It is fixed at one setting. To change that setting requires one to go to the kite and physically change how the bridle is attached to
the canopy. Once the change is done, the bridle is again fixed in one permanent position.
Depowerable kites are quite different in that the bridle is fully changeable during flight. This is normally done through the sliding of the bar on
the center "chicken" line. By sliding the bar either in towards you or away from you, you actively change the configuration and curvature of the
canopy through the active bridle. This is usually accomplished with a network of pulleys and lines. When you power up the kite, you basically
increase the overall curvature of the sail to "cup" more wind. When you depower the kite, you flatten out the overall curvature of the sail to dump
wind.
This can not be done on a fixed bridle kite.
Hope that helps clear up the difference for you.
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thrasher
Junior Member
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Location: Bridgewater, Ma
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Great explanation. Thank your for your response. definitely cleared up the difference. Thanks!
Peter Lynn Vibe 2.6
Prism Stylus P3 Ice
HQ Rush III Pro
HQ Rush III
Twister II 5.6
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windhunter
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I needed that too.....Thanks ! Now not to be to picky but could we go a little further and explain the advantages of Depower over FB.
Flexi Sting 1.2m
Sensei 3m Trainer
Beamer 1.4m,3m
Viper 5.3
Maybe a more bigger kite!!!!
ETC...ETC..ETC.......
Land Lizard
This #@%$#!$ IS CRAZY ADDICTIVE
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Txshooter38
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To be very simple the advantage of a depower is exactly as you would expect. You can meter more or less power on the fly. I am not the resident
expert but that is generally the idea. Someone much more well versed will give a more though response.
While we are at it (hijack alert!!) can someone please explain about when you trim a depower what we are trimming for??? What am I suppose to look for
to know the kite is "trimmed correctly"? Not overshooting? Power? Speed? I just don't know what to look for.
Curtis
Currently flying:
Beamer IV 2m, 3m, 4m
Ozone Flow 5M
PL Vibe 1.3
Synergy 12m
Flysurfer 19m DLX
HQ Apex III 7.5
PL Twister 7.7m--Just plain sick...
Driving:
Peter Lynn Buggy
GI Landboard
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indigo_wolf
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Bladerunner
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The advantages are hard to describe . It's not so much what are the advantages but how it is different. I would write too much .
Trim . I launch mostly depowered . When I trim out , I try and set it so the kite will stall but not quite back down with bar full in.
Kites: 2.5m Profoil , Quadrifoil XL kitesurfer, NPW 5 Danger.
Flexifoil: 1.7m Sting, 4.9m Blade 3, 9m Blade 2.
Flysurfer : 19m Speed 2 SA, 7m Pulse
Peter Lynn :18m Phantom, 15m Synergy, 10m Synergy, 1200 Farc, 460 Sarc, 130 Tarc, 5m Peel, 4.2m , 6.4, 8.5 C-Quads, 3.5 LS2 single skin.
Rides: Flexi / P.L. Frankin'Buggy , Shaped + straight skiis, sand skis, Coyote blades. Core 95 ATB. RKB R2 ATB .
Ken (K2)
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Pulsar
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Registered: 28-12-2010
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Trimmed correctly means the kite delivers little power with the bar up and nice useable (so not too much or too little) power with the bar down. With
the trim you adjust the length of the center lines. On a windy day you put them short, in low winds you make them long. Technically a depower kite can
work perfectly without a trim. In low winds it would work, since then you can pull the bar a decent length towards you. Only, in heavy winds you'd
have to shift the bar between far and very far away from you, and human arms are just not that long. By shortening the power lines, the length the bar
needs to move back and forth over, is brought towards you, while also limiting the maximum you can pull the bar in. That way you can also not
accidentally pull the bar too close towards you, which would result in mad power.
Things like overshooting are a byproduct of the power system. Low power also means low drag, so a kite can overfly you with the bar up. That's why on
high performance depowerss, when the kite is speeding from powerzone towards the edge of the wind, you pull the bar towards you a bit. That way you
increase drag, preventing the depower to fly out of the window.
edit - should have known someone would post a link while i was typing all this :P
Me: Dutch Flyboarder ... but not the kind you\'re thinking of.
Power: PL Vibe 1.8 (1.9 mod) - PL Vibe 1.9 - PL Vibe 2.3 - PL Hornet 2.0 - PL Twister 4.1 - PL Twister 5.6
Wind Range: Riding: 11 - 38 knots. Jumping: 12 - 21 knots.
Ride: Trampa (14ply 35deg channels)
Wants: PL Reactor II 6.9 - PL Impulse TR 3.0
Former gear: Libre Dragonboard Sirius - PL Guerilla 13 - Flysurfer Speed I 10 - Ozone Manta II 10
Homemade: PL Vibe 1.8 - Star 6.0 (Depower) - 3 Nasawings - Pixie 1.5 (fun foil) - Flowform 3.0 (slk) - Frog (laundry)
Dilemma: If you work, you have money for kites but no time to fly them. If you don\'t work, you have plenty of time to fly
kites, but no money to buy them. Either way, we\'re all screwed...
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B-Roc
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The advantages to depower, for me 1) ability to absorb a gust much better then FB kites simply by pushing the bar out 2) ability to add a bit more
power when you needed by pulling the bar in 3) way easier to jump with.
As far as trim straps, once set for the conditions I don't really touch mine but if a big gust come along and I'm suddenly going faster then I want to
be or I'm being pulled more laterally then I want then I reach up, pull some trim in and that works great to shed speed / pull. But the trimmer is
used mostly for setting the conditions for the day and then the bar is used to fine tune the kite as you are moving.
I launch mostly trimmed and then let out enough trim so the kite is flying well, not stalling and turns fast for the conditions.
Depower Quiver: 14m Gin Eskimo, 10m Gin Eskimo III, 6m Gin Yeti, 4.5m Gin Yeti (custom bridle and mixer)
Fixed Bridle Quiver: MAC Bego 400, JOJO ET Instinct 2.5 & 5.5, Lil Devil 1.5, Sting 1.2
Rides: Ground Industries
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