macboy
Posting Freak
Posts: 3146
Registered: 15-10-2007
Location: Edmonton, Alberta
Member Is Offline
Mood: They're ALL good ideas. Right up until they become BAD ideas.
|
|
Sizing a Peter Lynn
I'm on the watch for a used Peter Lynn to add to my quiver so I can see how they fly / perform. I'd rather get something I can get some use out of so
what sizes should I be watching for? Assuming I intend to hit the water with it and will be on a beginner board (larger than average), weigh about
170lbs and get winds around the 15-30 km/h mark...more to the low end but I don't want to size for that and get scared.
KC07 - Certified Chronic
Rev Shockwave | Brooza II 3 | BusterII's 3/4/5 | Hornet 1.5
Reactor II 5.5/6.9 | AccessXC 10 | Frenzy 12 | PsychoIII 13 | Speed2 12 | Speed3 15 | SA2.5 19
Bomba 15 | Phantom 15/18 | Venom 13 | Slingshot T3 9/11/14m
Skis, Ski Skates, Nobile RM Pro, MBS Pro 90, Kailolo 5' 11" Custom Phish, Kailolo 5'9" Custom Phish, Plyboard, Proof 151,
FlydoorM, F-One 198, Coyotes, Comp XR+, and the BEST WIFE IN THE WORLD!
I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.
~ Thomas Edison
|
|
bigkahuna
Senior Member
Posts: 713
Registered: 21-11-2006
Location: OBX of North Carolina
Member Is Offline
|
|
A couple things about PL's you ought to know:
First, PL's tend to perform a bit worse on their bottom end than a similar sized C-kite and about the same on their top end as a bow kite. So if
everyone else is on a 14m kite, you'll probably want to use a 15-16m PL.
Second, 9 mph/15 kph wind speeds is pretty unrealistic for kiting on water with any sort of kite. You'll need more like 12 - 15 mph winds to really
do much with any kite.
Third, PL's have poor bottom end. The new Synergy model is supposed to be better than previous PL's in this area, but I wouldn't expect a huge
improvement over prior PL's. For super light winds (less than 12-15 mph) you'll likely want a Flysurfer or inflato. When the wind picks up to 15-18
mph, that's when your PL will start to shine.
Where PL's performance is superior IMHO is: in air stability, durability, gust handling and high wind performance.
Another thing you ought to know is that learning how to kite on the water in light winds is many times more difficult than in stronger winds. If you
want to learn how to kitesurf, you'll need to wait for those days when the wind is over 15 mph and size your equipment accordingly. Don't even think
about trying to learn on days that are blowing less than that as you will either become frustrated or injure yourself. Have you considered taking a
lesson or two at a kitesurfing school?
[Edited on 3-5-2008 by bigkahuna]
|
|
macboy
Posting Freak
Posts: 3146
Registered: 15-10-2007
Location: Edmonton, Alberta
Member Is Offline
Mood: They're ALL good ideas. Right up until they become BAD ideas.
|
|
Thanks so much for taking the time to share Kahuna. I've got this burning desire in me to try a PL so maybe I'll just try to get my hands on one
without worrying about getting one specifically for the water. It'll certainly make it easier to find since I don't run across them that often on the
used market.
Regarding lessons - yes, I'm just torn by "where". I had thought about heading to Vancouver but that's a 12 hour drive and the risk of no wind is very
real. My snowkite lessons got skunked due to too much wind and they've yet to reschedule me so I don't want the same to happen on the water. I had
thought about making a trip of it and heading to Hood River but that seems rather extravagant. Trouble is the local scene here is tough and of the two
guys I've heard of that offer lessons, one has moved away and the other one isn't high;y recommended (not sure why). Snowbird offered to help me out
if I can get out there which is great but I'm still faced with a 12 hour drive.
Then the rational wife says, "But if you took the lessons locally, could you not then spend the money you'd save on more gear?" I think she really
meant I could take her out to dinner and buy her a pair of new shoes - one of her addictions ; )
KC07 - Certified Chronic
Rev Shockwave | Brooza II 3 | BusterII's 3/4/5 | Hornet 1.5
Reactor II 5.5/6.9 | AccessXC 10 | Frenzy 12 | PsychoIII 13 | Speed2 12 | Speed3 15 | SA2.5 19
Bomba 15 | Phantom 15/18 | Venom 13 | Slingshot T3 9/11/14m
Skis, Ski Skates, Nobile RM Pro, MBS Pro 90, Kailolo 5' 11" Custom Phish, Kailolo 5'9" Custom Phish, Plyboard, Proof 151,
FlydoorM, F-One 198, Coyotes, Comp XR+, and the BEST WIFE IN THE WORLD!
I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.
~ Thomas Edison
|
|
Bladerunner
Posting Freak
Posts: 9679
Registered: 17-10-2006
Location: Vancouver
Member Is Offline
|
|
What about Calgary ?? I think Jeff at kitesource.ca offers lessons. You may have to go to Keho lake but it's closer than Van !!
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)
|
|
macboy
Posting Freak
Posts: 3146
Registered: 15-10-2007
Location: Edmonton, Alberta
Member Is Offline
Mood: They're ALL good ideas. Right up until they become BAD ideas.
|
|
That's true....I should get in touch with him and see if the winds have a margin of predictability down there.
I will.
KC07 - Certified Chronic
Rev Shockwave | Brooza II 3 | BusterII's 3/4/5 | Hornet 1.5
Reactor II 5.5/6.9 | AccessXC 10 | Frenzy 12 | PsychoIII 13 | Speed2 12 | Speed3 15 | SA2.5 19
Bomba 15 | Phantom 15/18 | Venom 13 | Slingshot T3 9/11/14m
Skis, Ski Skates, Nobile RM Pro, MBS Pro 90, Kailolo 5' 11" Custom Phish, Kailolo 5'9" Custom Phish, Plyboard, Proof 151,
FlydoorM, F-One 198, Coyotes, Comp XR+, and the BEST WIFE IN THE WORLD!
I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.
~ Thomas Edison
|
|
Bladerunner
Posting Freak
Posts: 9679
Registered: 17-10-2006
Location: Vancouver
Member Is Offline
|
|
I'm out of touch with Alberta, never even heard of Keho when I lived there but I understand it runs on thermals so is pretty reliable.
Thermals or not It's near Lethbridge so it must be windy 24 / 7 / 365
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)
|
|
krumly
Senior Member
Posts: 598
Registered: 26-12-2004
Location: St. Paul, Minnesota
Member Is Offline
|
|
Out snow kiting last week at the annual Mille Lac Kite Crossing, there was a guy on a 14m PL Vortex. Winds were light - maybe 8-10 with lulls around
6. He was able to keep the kite in the air, but couldn't get squat for power. On bows or depower foils from 11-14, people were moving OK.
My 9m GII Iis great fun, but totally frustrating unless you have a steady 10+ mph, and at that low speed you have to work the kite. It rocks after
about 15 mph. And I'm only 127 lbs. I've felt fine on it in conditions where I'm also fine with my 3m Brooza. Maybe it's like a the range of 3-5.5m
medium aspect foils. I remember Kahuna thinking the bigger GII's are dogs, and he may be right. The 9m steers quick enough, by virtue of being small.
And the stability is awesome. Never used it on water, only snow. Want to use it with my buggy this year.
krumly
Flying:
1.5 m Ozone LD Stunt
2.2, 3.2, 4.2 m C-Quads
2, 3, 4, 5.5, 7.5m PKD Broozas
9m PL GII, w/ adjustable rear strap mod
Dual mode mod PL GI 13, HArc 6, FArc 12
Cab 5m Convert, 7&9m Xbow, 12m SB
Lots of stunt kites and a Rev Supersonic
Riding:
Libre Special buggy, PL Comp buggy
Line skiboards, & Lib-Tech Park & Pipes
Cabrinha Prodigy kiteboard
|
|
bigkahuna
Senior Member
Posts: 713
Registered: 21-11-2006
Location: OBX of North Carolina
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: | I remember Kahuna thinking the bigger GII are dogs, and he may be right. |
The Guerilla II 22m was a dog. Slowest turning kite I've ever flown, poor depower / range and had marginally more bottom end than a Guerilla I 18m.
The other, "medium" sized Guerilla II's were notorious for having less bottom end than the Guerilla I's. From what I recall from other users, the
small Guerilla II's (like yours) were great high wind kites.
For lightwinds on land, an open cell foil is probably the way to go. On the water, I've been happiest with inflatos.
|
|
canuck
Senior Member
Posts: 514
Registered: 5-10-2006
Location: Calgary, AB
Member Is Offline
|
|
Hey Kelly,
Too bad the wind is not going to show up at Gull Lake this weekend. I've got a 13m PL Venom II that you can try. I bought it just after freezeup and
haven't had the right conditions to try it much yet. It is kind of big to hang to dry in the house if it gets snow packed in.
PM me if you are heading down to Calgary when the winds are forecast 20+ kph. Maybe we could meet at Sylvan or Gull if the snow holds on 'till Easter.
Bill
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
HQ Powerkites seat harness
Salomon snowblade 90, straight & shaped skis
PL Comp ST buggy, MBS Comp 16 Pro, Coyote All Terrain Rollerblades
BodyGlove wakeskis
|
|
PrairieWind
Member
Posts: 394
Registered: 31-8-2006
Member Is Offline
|
|
|
|
|