I've been playing with my 4.8m NPW and mountainboard and I had a few things I wanted to share. I imagine most of you already know these things, but
I'd appreciate any tips to help me along on my journey.
10mph seems on the low side of the window for the 4.8 meter kite. Up until today, I've had it up in winds up to 20mph but that's been my limit. I've
had it in gusts up to 25 mph or so and it's a beast to hang on to at that point. Once I had to let go of one handle and bag it for the day.
After a hard wipeout on asphalt due to gusty wind and loose trucks, I constantly adjust the tightness of my trucks based on wind speed.
I'm finding that there is a lot of subtlety in handling an npw. My skills and nerve for high winds are improving. Today the wind was gusting up to
22. In high winds, I end up curling the top of the kite a bit at the top of the window to cut power as I jump on the board. I've also found that
small changes in handle orientation / angle are helpful when I'm a bit too close to the wind direction. Today I eased out on the leeward handle to
adjust the shape of the wing. It's kind of hard to describe, but I'm sure you'll get the picture.
After a particularly bruising and bloody wipeout I took the bindings off my board. It's easier to bail when the wind gusts and I don't run the risk
of getting a foot hung up. I ride primarily on roads with 2 meter lines and if things get a bit hairy and I have to bail, I steer the board toward
the grassy shoulder and hop up to clear the board as it rolls out from under me. I hit the ground running.
With our gusty winds I've had a bit of trouble with my board outrunning my kite as the wind falls. To keep from dragging my kite I usually bail off.
To counter this I've been contemplating building something like a windskate. www.windskate.com
I can see where this might have some advantages in variable winds as I could adjust it more like a boat sail. In failing winds, I could just hang
onto it until the wind picks back up with no dragging on the ground.
Looks like we are having the same ideas. I've been using a NASA 5.5 with a landboard as well. I was impressed with the Windskate web page also and
tried to make my own. My first attempt was based on using a broken windsurfing boom and an old sail. It was held together with nylon ties. Mine was
about 8 foot on a side (maybe less) and about 2 m2.
A much better job was done by this fellow down in Brazil. He made his sail from tarp material. (Check out all his video's - in one of them he
explained how he built it.)
There are some problems with this approach. The Windskate type sail has a very small area - typically about 2 m2, which may be ok for really high
wind, but maybe only on smooth surfaces. I tried building a bigger version (~10 ft on a side, 3m2) and have continued to experiment with it some,
but its not that easy to use and still needs a lot of wind. I used kite fabric from a trashed c-kite and top half of broken windsurf masts. Unless
you have a local source, aluminum tubes are not cheap, so that's another problem.
A much easier way to go is to just put a windsurfing rig on your board. Like this (please excuse my cheesy homage to the movie "interstellar"):
It would help if you knew how to windsurf, but putting a sail on a board like that is easier to learn than either skateboarding or windsurfing. Old
sails and masts are what you would want and can be had very cheap second hand if you have any kind of windsurfing community nearby. It would also
work on other than smooth surface, but I've not done it that way.
There is more of this madness on my youtube page, which might give you some ideas:
Nice videos. I really like the 1M NPW. I plant to try something like your delta first. If I can scrounge parts, I'll try a windsurfer rig. Not
much water around here.
Taking the build to one side, firstly well done for sticking with the NPW the flying skills you learn / develop will help you fly almost any other
kite with ease. Now here is the but: I think you need more kites :D You're trying to use one kite to cover a big wind range, I board very rarely, my
5m NPW in the buggy is on the limit of being over powered at 20 mph and becomes a real handful, it's at this point I keep out of the main window and
use the edges, I would usually switch down to a 3m, wind dropping below 15 mph and I start using a bigger size.
Blade V 4.9m & 8.5m VIP,Ozone Frenzy 11m, SS Flexifoil buggy, PL hybrid suspension buggy (PTW), MBS core 95.
homemade:
NPW 9b: 7m (Union Jack). NPW 9b HA 3m (Damien) and 10m (Jolly R). NPW21 3m, 5m (aka Zombie), 8m (Batman), 11.5m (NASA), NPW 21 HA 6.8m
The Hammers 5m, 7.2m & 12m
Thinking about my own NPWs in gusts they tend to speed up across the window, as the wind drops they slow and drop back, I counter this by steering
away and then towards the kite as the wind drops.
Blade V 4.9m & 8.5m VIP,Ozone Frenzy 11m, SS Flexifoil buggy, PL hybrid suspension buggy (PTW), MBS core 95.
homemade:
NPW 9b: 7m (Union Jack). NPW 9b HA 3m (Damien) and 10m (Jolly R). NPW21 3m, 5m (aka Zombie), 8m (Batman), 11.5m (NASA), NPW 21 HA 6.8m
The Hammers 5m, 7.2m & 12m
You tried longer lines yet? 2M lines are really hard to fly without super clean wind on, especially gusty wind. You might be better off finding a
larger area to ride, and trying 20M+ lines. They really will change things a lot for you, including the amount of power generated.
Yeah, I really need a quiver instead of a single option.
Looking at the guys with mattresses makes me think something like a homemade sportsail might have some utility in strong winds. http://sporting-sails.com/
No, I have not tried the longer lines yet. I'm waiting for the winter wheat crop to provide good ground cover. Once that happens I think I can use a
wheat field without causing wind erosion. Lots of the grassy, wide open spaces here have a healthy crop of puncture vine. I end up with my tires
covered and leaking slime.
Looking at the web page it looks like those sportsails are mainly used for braking, not propulsion. Maybe it can be used both ways in high wind
though.