So I built my own turbo bar to try out on my NPWs. Just didn't have $200 lying around for the experiment.
It works fairly well, but I almost lost one of my kites last night :o
I set it up like Ozone's bar, with a primary release (top hat) and secondary release (chicken loop), both of them being panic snaps on my homemade
bar. I then clipped the "chicken loop" snap to my harness with a carabiner.
So while clipping into my harness, my glove caught the "chicken loop" snap... when released, the turbo bar slides to full brake, which in my setup was
enough to reverse launch. So the kite slammed into the ground, deflated and then reinflated and took off in reverse. Luckily I was flying static to
test the setup and was able to make a few quick steps, dive and grab the bar.
So the whole reason this stupid event occurred was because I couldn't think of where to clip a leash to the thing such that it would be depowered on
release but not wind up the leash when I spin the bar.
I know some guys here have the Ozone product. Where does the leash go? Ozone claims that there is a "leashless re-ride safety", but what the heck does
this mean? Should I set the brakes such that the kite collapses on release instead of reversing, thus making it just lay there on the ground? I assume
it will still blow away downwind though...
Thanks a lot! The "leashless reride" safety works pretty well, it kills the kite dead and is easy to reconnect and get back in the air. That's how I
land the kite to pack it up. I'm just not quite sure how it's "leashless" as the kite will still slowly blow away if you aren't holding the bar.
Guess I will just add a leash to my chicken loop snap and set the bar to not reverse launch when the bar is all the way back.
That's correct. I should have been more clear about #2 being the leashless re ride safety and not having anything to do with being a leash attachment
point. I'm glad you mentioned the #3 connection point because I'd forgotten all about that little detail.
IMO #1 is a pointless leash point as far as safety goes... It is a suicide leash point, not like a 4th or 5th line safety. If you want the leash to
function as an Oh S*** safety to depower the kite while remaining hooked to it, I would use the attachment point on the brake strap. I also like to
use that spot for my stakes to keep the bar from popping off the stake as I walk my lines out.
NAPKA US8008
Kites:
Ozone R1 V3 7m
Flysurfer Sonic v3 15m
Flysurfer Speed 3 Deluxe 19m
Peter Lynn Charger 2 12m
Ozone Access Reride 6m
Peter Lynn 2013 Reactor 5.5m
Peter Lynn 2013 Reactor 8.6m
Prism Tensor 5.0m
I would assume the word leashless means you don't need a leash. Attaching a leash to the break strap doesn't gain you anything over the primary
safety. And if your primary safety fails to do its job, surely you'd want to completely disconnect? I have never felt the need to attach a leash to
a turbo bar as I feel it would just make a simple system into an awkward one. I've had to pull the primary on a few occasions and its done its job
well.
I agree with you, John. I do not use a leash with mine, as the primary safety works very well. I have had to pop it once for real, and every now and
then I pop it to keep the muscle memory in tact. I can't help but wonder what the loop is on the brake strap though, if not for a leash? I use it to
put my stake through personally.
NAPKA US8008
Kites:
Ozone R1 V3 7m
Flysurfer Sonic v3 15m
Flysurfer Speed 3 Deluxe 19m
Peter Lynn Charger 2 12m
Ozone Access Reride 6m
Peter Lynn 2013 Reactor 5.5m
Peter Lynn 2013 Reactor 8.6m
Prism Tensor 5.0m
Thanks for all the discussion. I am now realizing that leashless basically means that the chicken loop IS your leash, and the primary safety is what
you want to pull 99% of times. The secondary is the same as the release you would have on a leash, to ditch the kite in an absolute disaster. I just
have to watch I don't pull the secondary by accident! Oops.
I use that loop to stake my kite too, I think that's what it's for.
I heard you can ride unhooked with one of these bars, but again don't know how. If you are unhooked, do you not have the brakes full on?
You have to make sure you trim it right. If you have the brakes adjusted perfectly, pulling the bar all the way in should just barely pucker the tail
of the kite so it powers up a bit, but not enough to stall it if it is at speed. If you want to ride unhooked, you would need the brakes to be one
knot looser than perfect trim.
NAPKA US8008
Kites:
Ozone R1 V3 7m
Flysurfer Sonic v3 15m
Flysurfer Speed 3 Deluxe 19m
Peter Lynn Charger 2 12m
Ozone Access Reride 6m
Peter Lynn 2013 Reactor 5.5m
Peter Lynn 2013 Reactor 8.6m
Prism Tensor 5.0m
Just realized I have been flying this all wrong... I had it set to backstall on bar in - it was a pain to say the least. Supposed to trim it to just
cup the tail bar in and pull the brake strap to backstall!
So obvious, I feel dumb :P going to trim properly so the kite is always going forwards now.
Yeah the first time I launched my kite on it to check the trim, I noticed it would hardly launch. If I pulled the bar in at all it would try to stall
on me. That sounds like what you had going on. You want the lines to droop just a bit with the bar all the way out, and barely pucker the tail with
it all the way in. I found that this is the perfect balance because it allows you to have a slight depower effect on most kites. If the kite is at
speed and you pull the bar in, you shouldn't be able to stall it with the bar, but the kite will pull a bit harder and slow just a tad. It isn't the
same as depower, but it does give a similar feel at times.
NAPKA US8008
Kites:
Ozone R1 V3 7m
Flysurfer Sonic v3 15m
Flysurfer Speed 3 Deluxe 19m
Peter Lynn Charger 2 12m
Ozone Access Reride 6m
Peter Lynn 2013 Reactor 5.5m
Peter Lynn 2013 Reactor 8.6m
Prism Tensor 5.0m