Along the lines of Eric's "Line Management" thread I thought I'd toss in here a "Bridle Management" thread. Related but different.
I've been struggling for some time with bridle management, made worse by my selection of SS kites that require extraordinary amounts of bridling for
the kite to form its wing shape in the air sans the second skin for structure. Bridle tangling for me has been exacerbated by flying on the Ivanpah
playa where you need to wrap these SS beauties around padded polls pounded into the ground. The patchwork and flaky nature of the playa surface adds
to the fun, grabbing and holding onto bridling like mad.
Two years ago at IBX 2016 John (Cerebite) most kindly showed me how to daisy chain bridles to improve their management. I know this comes as a shock,
but I'm sort of stubborn and I never started doing this. I finally bit the bullet, and with great deference to Cerebite packed away the first two of
my LS2s after rinsing off the playa dust with some dandy daisy chaining of the bridling.
I found this short informative video on YouTube that goes through the basics. It is remarkably easy finger-motor wise and now that I'm a new convert
I think this is the greatest thing going. :D
For my Edo's, large inflatables, and other single lines it's the cat's meow.
Occasionally I'll miss a loop which requires a feed through of the leader, darn.
I haven't needed to do this with my power kites.
Anyway never drop the leader into the kite without securing the end or it will ferret around and find its way between the other bridle legs.
Above all, always remember to take special care with any kite you think I might someday own:D
Flying mostly single skins, with some orphans, the American flag, and a PL buggy. US01
"What strategies have others employed to keep their bridles purdy and neat?"
:D Teach the Kite Squire how to daisy chain so I can get back to flying
And as Ed mentioned make sure to secure the pigtails after chaining so they don't "wander." If the kite does not contain dedicated retainers [as I
have seen the Born's do] I put a quick in line hitch into [usually] the innermost and bottom bridle on that side.
NASA wings -1 to 12m [mostly KM4]
Foils -2 -12m [mostly PL & Pansh]
VTT Stinger on Midi's
Another day in Paradise...
Good video. I'll have to try that. My main strategy has been to put some anchor loops into my kites to tie the leaders into one place before
storing. Usually works ok, though for reasons unknown - not always. Likely has to do with being sloppy.
Hi all, question about that process: must the flying lines be disconnected while doing that?
Absolutely not! Assuming you are using a DP kite here (but the same goes of course for FB) gather the brake and power lines together from one side in
one of your hands keeping them even in length. With your other hand grab around the gathered DP pulley lines and draw that hand down towards the kite
keeping your fist closed but loose around the bridling. For what it's worth I found it convenient to sling the gathered bridle "rope" over my shoulder
as I gathered the bridling towards the kite. I kept this process going until I ran out of bridling. At that point I just slung a non-knotted loop with
the bridle "rope" and started my daisy chain loops working back up towards the DP pulleys. I finished looping when I reached the pulleys. If my
bridles had been connected to kite lines (they weren't today) I would probably just lay the daisy chains neatly down on the kite and place the bar
with wound lines in the center of the trailing edge. I know I'm "mansplaining" but I would have completed the other side before completing the winding
of lines on the bar and placing the bar at the bottom and then fold up the kite wrapping the bar at the end of the folding to make one nice
cylindrical burrito with the bar just inside the burrito and all stray lines tucked away. Into a storage bag and presto!
What I'm curious about trying is whether I can place the kite on a padded pole and launch the kite with the daisy chains still looped! I'm going to
need to get confident in my process and then try it with my smallest kite in light winds just to see if the bridles will just shake out on their own.
That would be awesome! Has anybody had success trying that feat?
Thanks for that vid, Windstruck. I recently got a kite that had the bridals daisy chained - I just thought the dude had way too much time on his
hands or something. Of course I untied the first link incorrectly, and took it apart link by link rather than being able to just pull.
So far I've gotten along just larks heading my bridals if I need to take the lines off. I do a bridal precheck even if the lines are attached anyway.
If you do the braided bridal launch, make a video, that would be fun to see! :D
Definitely try it with the 3.5 LS, I have one of those already. Did you see Randy put his kite away directly int the truck using the "wind method,
slick?
Steve. With the NASA Star kites I share bars, so I land and set up with the kite nose down and the bar on the ground red on the right. If the wind is
reasonable I hook the safety line around the bug axle and back onto itself below the bar, if the wind is high I hook on above the stopping bead to
keep it glued down.
So Kite glued down, face down as I approach from outside the lineset.
Step inside the line set and pull the top center of the kite along the ground until it's even with the little line boots and put your knee on it. Now
you can dis and connect the bridles to the kite.
Now, kite on the ground with a knee on it. Grab the red and blue pigtails and pull them toward you until the lower bridles are pulled well over the
kite.
Fold left and right to cover the bridles, the fold up from the bottom and down from the top. Then roll the kite, you're done, now roll yoursel
a....never mind.
When launching. After you hook up and still have a knee on the kite, kneeling inside the lineset, grab a left or right hand full of kite. Step out
side the line set and walk around beside to behind your kite, only then turn it loose.
This prevents the wild man dance that I do when the kite launches, dives at me, tangles me with bridle, and turns the bug upwind at the same moment.
darn.
The beauty of this quicky is that I can do it in any wind so far and most of the rolling and folding happens in my lap, out of the gravel or wet dirt,
which is mud, which is how clear I've made this.....
Pulling the stowed pigtails forward to draw all the line up from the bottom stops those stray lines from peeking out after I fold.
:eureka:
Flying mostly single skins, with some orphans, the American flag, and a PL buggy. US01
Thanks for the tip and video link. I'm going to try this with the Peak 3 9m. Love the kite, but, the bridles are a little overwhelming. Admittedly,
I haven't had any problems with them. But, when the kite is on ground the bridles look like a mess waiting to tangle.
Thanks for the tip and video link. I'm going to try this with the Peak 3 9m. Love the kite, but, the bridles are a little overwhelming. Admittedly,
I haven't had any problems with them. But, when the kite is on ground the bridles look like a mess waiting to tangle.
Glad this was helpful. SS bridling was born for daisy chaining IMHO. Silly it took me so long to get here, despite best efforts by my good friend
Cerebite.
Definitely try it with the 3.5 LS, I have one of those already. Did you see Randy put his kite away directly int the truck using the "wind method,
slick?
Steve. With the NASA Star kites I share bars, so I land and set up with the kite nose down and the bar on the ground red on the right. If the wind is
reasonable I hook the safety line around the bug axle and back onto itself below the bar, if the wind is high I hook on above the stopping bead to
keep it glued down.
So Kite glued down, face down as I approach from outside the lineset.
Step inside the line set and pull the top center of the kite along the ground until it's even with the little line boots and put your knee on it. Now
you can dis and connect the bridles to the kite.
Now, kite on the ground with a knee on it. Grab the red and blue pigtails and pull them toward you until the lower bridles are pulled well over the
kite.
Fold left and right to cover the bridles, the fold up from the bottom and down from the top. Then roll the kite, you're done, now roll yoursel
a....never mind.
When launching. After you hook up and still have a knee on the kite, kneeling inside the lineset, grab a left or right hand full of kite. Step out
side the line set and walk around beside to behind your kite, only then turn it loose.
This prevents the wild man dance that I do when the kite launches, dives at me, tangles me with bridle, and turns the bug upwind at the same moment.
darn.
The beauty of this quicky is that I can do it in any wind so far and most of the rolling and folding happens in my lap, out of the gravel or wet dirt,
which is mud, which is how clear I've made this.....
Pulling the stowed pigtails forward to draw all the line up from the bottom stops those stray lines from peeking out after I fold.
:eureka:
Sally - this sounds like a great system. I just tried unsuccessfully to find an old video Steffen Born sent me about three years ago that shows him
folding his NASA Stars. I've used the method and really liked it. In short you attach the bridle pig tails with larks head knots to the loops at the
nose of the kite, then with your back to the wind hold the kite in front of you nose up with your arms outstretched to your sides holding the kite on
its edges part way down the sides of the triangle if you will. The bridling and trailing bottom corners of the kite will be playing out downwind of
you. Next in a rapid motion bring your hands together while simultaneously going to one knee, swooping the kite to the ground partially folded with
the bridling captured inside the outer corners of the kite. The kite will look like a big fat blunt pencil on the ground in front of you. It is then
simply a matter of completing the folding up as the bridling is all tucked up inside. With a little practice this move works really, really well.
Higher wind actually makes this easier up to a point.
When the daisy chain is messed up, it means that every single link is backward and required 10x the time.
After two mess-ups...I stopped doing it.
But...we all know I do everything backwards and different than EVERYONE else!
Paul
Peter Lynn - Resurrected Vapors (thanks to Tenacious Tape): 3.2, 3.8, 4.5, 5.4m. Size 2.3m (dead) - all internal bellows shredded
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Ozone - Method 6.5m (w/ Ozone Turbo Bar)
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When the daisy chain is messed up, it means that every single link is backward and required 10x the time.
After two mess-ups...I stopped doing it.
But...we all know I do everything backwards and different than EVERYONE else!
Paul
LOL. I did the same thing using this method on extension cords. I did it wrong a couple times and abandoned the method. I'm sure I would get it
right eventually I guess.
When the daisy chain is messed up, it means that every single link is backward and required 10x the time.
It is possible to correct a daisy chain if it's not undoing correctly. I'll see if I can find a video showing what to do or make one myself. once you
have that correction it's a quick pull on a loop about to tighten and pulling the line through a differnt direction and the whole chain unravels
correctly - no having to undo it one by one. I think someone posted a video on one of the kite making forums in the last few years, I'll look
Mark Groshens NAPKA KC 13
WindSpeed kites & design - Canada
Peter Lynn Arcs: Charger2 22.5 +18 + 15 + 6.5, Charger I 6, Scorpion 16 + 10, Phantom II 12 + 9, Orig Phantom 9 + 6, Synergy 10 + 8, F 1200, S 840
Ocean Rodeo: Flite 17 + 12, Rise 13 + 10 + 7, Razor 9 + 6
Foils: PL Leopards and Lynx, Airea Raptors, some PL Reactor IIs + IIIs, Libre Spirits, Cross Kite Sonics, Ozone Flow
Peter Lynn Kite Cat for cruising the lakes
buggies: PL XR+, Cameleon Pagona, custom bigfoot, PL Bigfoot, custom ice buggy
Boards: 2 custom directionals, O.R Surf series 6-3 and 5-11, Mako Duke, Mako Skinny, Mako 140 Wide, Mako 150 Wide, Mako King, Brunotti
lots of old school skis, snowboard
When the daisy chain is messed up, it means that every single link is backward and required 10x the time.
It is possible to correct a daisy chain if it's not undoing correctly. I'll see if I can find a video showing what to do or make one myself. once you
have that correction it's a quick pull on a loop about to tighten and pulling the line through a differnt direction and the whole chain unravels
correctly - no having to undo it one by one. I think someone posted a video on one of the kite making forums in the last few years, I'll look
Mark, as good luck would have it, you won't have to look far. Look at the video at the top of this thread and advance the video to about the 2:15
mark. You're welcome. :frog:
Mark, as good luck would have it, you won't have to look far. Look at the video at the top of this thread and advance the video to about the 2:15
mark. You're welcome. :frog:
hey there you go. I was thinking it was easy but how can I explain it without doing a drawing or video - that was a lot easier, thanks!
Mark Groshens NAPKA KC 13
WindSpeed kites & design - Canada
Peter Lynn Arcs: Charger2 22.5 +18 + 15 + 6.5, Charger I 6, Scorpion 16 + 10, Phantom II 12 + 9, Orig Phantom 9 + 6, Synergy 10 + 8, F 1200, S 840
Ocean Rodeo: Flite 17 + 12, Rise 13 + 10 + 7, Razor 9 + 6
Foils: PL Leopards and Lynx, Airea Raptors, some PL Reactor IIs + IIIs, Libre Spirits, Cross Kite Sonics, Ozone Flow
Peter Lynn Kite Cat for cruising the lakes
buggies: PL XR+, Cameleon Pagona, custom bigfoot, PL Bigfoot, custom ice buggy
Boards: 2 custom directionals, O.R Surf series 6-3 and 5-11, Mako Duke, Mako Skinny, Mako 140 Wide, Mako 150 Wide, Mako King, Brunotti
lots of old school skis, snowboard
My 9.5m LS2 doesn't fly evenly and I'm forced to hold the bar on the top when flying to the right in my buggy to keep it from diving into the ground.
I don't have any specific memory of hooking the kite on something but I easily could have done it somewhere down the line.
I reached out to Steffen Born about it and he kindly sent me the video I posted at the bottom of this post. This sort of bridle length test is darn
simple to perform and I did it this morning. Sure enough I found about a half dozen lines on one side that were between 1-5 cm longer than their
matching bridle lines on the other side.
What I'm going to do about it is a whole other story. Knowing what I would have to do and daring to attempt it could well turn out to be two separate
things for me!
I know folks that actually build kites will chuckle at me, but I've got a phone call into the fine folks at www.fixmykite.com with whom I've had good dealings with over the years sewing kites for me. What they quote me may steer me one way or the other,
time will tell!
Have folks out there had good success balancing stretched out bridles (adjusting knots, etc.)?