Looking for something 6m or bigger. Needs to handle gusts and lulls well. Something well mannered and easy to fly.
Mainly something that handles the lulls well and doesn't fold up, crumple, collapse, or fall out of the sky.
For buggy use. 0-10mph wind.
Used to be a 7m Beamer if I recall(never flew it). A 6m Hornet exists.
How do kites like these do in terrible wind conditions?
I'm passing up way too many light wind days lately. I'm going to get out no matter what this week and find out what the true low end wind speed of my
5m Octane and 5.5m Reactors is.
Always love the Reactors... Rtz I think you have the 5.5m... Compliment it with the 6.9m and I think you'll be good... The way I always hear you
describe your wind, I can't imagine you'd need the 8.6m... But that one is one of my favs
I hear the new Reactors are better on the low end than the RIIs
I used to have the 6.9m RII. It just seemed too long and that kite has some weight to it. It was a challenge in light, light wind.
Here is an old video of it in action:
(video starts with the 5m Flow briefly)
A rare light wind day when the wind was both light enough, and steady enough to make good use of that kite. Those days are very rare.
Most days; the lulls make it a challenge to keep the kite in the air at all times(what I like). I also used to easily be overpowered by that
kite(sliding sideways downwind).
Typically every time I get out my 5.5m Reactor; I'm reminded very clearly why it's the largest I own. I'm planning on getting out everyday this week.
It's been a wet no wind mess the past couple weeks. And it's going to be very light this week. But it's this or nothing:
I've briefly flown the old Hornet 5m....nah, slow & sluggish. I have the 7 & 10m NS2 - the 10m needs about 5 knots to generate enough power
to park and ride on 20m lines. Add 1.5 knots for the 7m. Though you could try a 7m on 30 - 40m lines and see how that goes. The NS2's have
consistently performed better in my inland winds than Hornets, Beamers, Octanes, Flows, Apex & Access. I've flown with Mik333 when he's been
flying his 10m Century II when I couldn't get my 9m Riot off the ground - but he's a lot more skilled than me in light winds, and light wind flying
does take a bit of skill!
The only other kite I'd consider for light wind flying (that I could possibly afford) is the Peak. Or Peak 2 which I think has just been released.
@B-roc: There is the link, it's a company located in Germany. The Nasa Star 2's main innovations are "Air Halfpipes" and 3rd line depower function
to the nose along with accompanying bars.
@RTZ: Sorry, but you asked for a tidal wave of single skin advice given your criteria :D
Nasa wings do really great in inland gusty winds. That is why I fly them. I make the npw9 version and have been flying them for years. Let me know
if I can help out.
Susan (npw goddess)
PKD Brooza\'s 2, 3, 4 and 5.5 meter
Libre Bora\'s 6 and 7 meter
Libre stainless full race with standard and big foot light wheels
Nasa wings: npw5 0.4, 0.8, 1.2, 1.7, 2.4, 3.1, 3.9, 4.8, 5.8, 6.9 meters
npw9 3.4, 5.3, 6.0, 8.0, 9.0, 10.0, 11.0, 15.0 meters
Quadrifoil xm for sale
Like you I have gusty, shift inland winds compounded by a heavy buggy, grass [on the field not in the flyer] and a need for speed.
I will also throw my weight behind the NPWs in big sizes.
In terms of foils I have had really good luck for the past year or so with a Blade 8.5. I have been testing a 12m Ace, 10m Blaze and a 10m ??? from
Pansh since last winter with indeterminate results.
I have an 8m Reactor but have never had it fly well in my conditions [too much variation].
NASA wings -1 to 12m [mostly KM4]
Foils -2 -12m [mostly PL & Pansh]
VTT Stinger on Midi's
Another day in Paradise...
RTZ, for what its worth, I bought that very 6.9 RII as you know. I tried and tried also to no avail. I now have a set of NS2 with a 7m incoming....
My wind lulls are ridiculous...
My Flows by far, have been the best janky eaters as far as foils go for my location. Having the closed cells is what saved it most times in a lull.
You have 5 of the new Reactors, so they must have an edge on the RII? I'd like to try another swing with the new Reactors as well. For me, it looks
like the Nasa Star 2 will be moving my Flows into second place as far as traction goes. Single skin with depower ability is rather mind blowing once
you experience it. I only mention this because I remember how much you liked the Flow quiver. Like others above, I'd also suggest looking into a
single skin like the NPW or the NS2, etc.
Of course, all subject to debate, but that's my humble opinion. Good luck Sir .
Cross Kites Sonic 3, 5m
Ozone Flow 2, 3, 4, 5m
Ace II 4, 5m
NAPKA-US24
4, 5, 6m ATB landsurfer. Custom longboard deck
Buggy: VTT Black Widow v2.0
The best open cell foil I have seen and used for crappy wind would have to be the Sky Country Reflex...
When the wind is so bad it makes a reactor snap shut and roll like a vapor or any other high aspect race foil the reflex usually sits there waiting
for some input almost like it's asking what your problem is.
I'm sure there are lots of kites that are OK in gusty wind but most do not perform well...
This topic still cracks me up.
John was the only one with a knowledgeable responce, the npw and most any kite on loooooonger lines. At a point the lulls become non-existent.
No kite is good in low winds and lulls, isnt that an oxymoron? Arnt those called sucker winds?
Appex buggy, Libre hardcore buggies.
Flexboardz. Blokarts.
PKD Century Soulflys. NPW's. Nasa Stars.
A few other less flown oddballs,
Line sets from 10" to 328" or 2m to 100m.
worlds only AQR that works.
North American distributor for PKD.
"Kite Bugging is not an addiction until you try to quit".
Some of us only have sucker winds to work with, so kite selection can be much more critical. To me there's no single best answer. It's about finding
what you like to fly and what works best for your conditions. That can and does vary for everyone. For me, I did a pole on what worked best and
followed that advice which has served me very well so far. I only wish it was my first post and not my 788th.
This topic still cracks me up.
John was the only one with a knowledgeable responce, the npw and most any kite on loooooonger lines. At a point the lulls become non-existent.
No kite is good in low winds and lulls, isnt that an oxymoron? Arnt those called sucker winds?
A lot of us do not have the luxury of space to fly loong lines, on 30 m lines I can only use about 1/3 of my available field and that is without
discussing the obstructions [static and dynamic]. What a flyer considers to be sucker winds also varies quite a bit, probably half of my flying
sessions are in winds under 10 mph.
NASA wings -1 to 12m [mostly KM4]
Foils -2 -12m [mostly PL & Pansh]
VTT Stinger on Midi's
Another day in Paradise...
The best open cell foil I have scene and used for crappy wind would have to be the Sky Country Reflex...
When the wind is so bad it makes a reactor snap shut and roll like a vapor or any other high aspect race foil the reflex usually sits there waiting
for some input almost like it's asking what your problem is.
I'm sure there are lots of kites that are OK in gusty wind but most do not perform well...
p.s. If anyone is interested Tonya/Solaris has a new 10m and a new 4m in North America deliverable by xmas.
Is it possible to design for strength, if the designer doesn't really understand what strength is?
8m speed wings.
Ozone Samurai 3m
Sky Country Reflex 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10m new 6m!
Sky Country NaSCa 2 11m
Sky Country Alasca 10m - sold
Rhombus Firebee 3m (ret).
Libre Vampir Race Pro 2.6m
Jojo Rage 8m
0 - 10 is a long shot for any kite... (3-4 - 10 is of though)
I would try a 10ish meter kite if the gusts really are only 10 or a 8.xx if the gusts are 12mph plus.
Not sure if you just don't have the power when needed with your smaller reactors or if they are crumpling up... 5.5 to 6.9 isn't enough of a size jump
to find the power you need... It's like fine tuning (if you have all kite sizes)
Low wind flying does take lots of patience / experience. Once you have the skills it is as easy as it looks. I know that I got really discouraged
watching everyone else while I failed to move very much in our low winds. Now, after many low, low wind days, I can ride with almost everyone else.
@Soliver For performance on a buggy, you can't beat the reactor. The SkyDog doesn't come close. But if you want to keep your arms on your body
longer, the SkyDog series is a pleasant bunch of kites to fly. I've flown every one of them and they were fun every time. You have to go up a size
or two for the buggy on grass especially...but they aren't a reactor.
This topic still cracks me up.
John was the only one with a knowledgeable responce, the npw and most any kite on loooooonger lines. At a point the lulls become non-existent.
No kite is good in low winds and lulls, isnt that an oxymoron? Arnt those called sucker winds?
A lot of us do not have the luxury of space to fly loong lines, on 30 m lines I can only use about 1/3 of my available field and that is without
discussing the obstructions [static and dynamic]. What a flyer considers to be sucker winds also varies quite a bit, probably half of my flying
sessions are in winds under 10 mph.
flying on the west coast through the US to the off shore east coast, I have found the wind is more or less the same. What I mean is it reacts and
operates the same.
When I started using long lines I was at Ivanpah. Sucker winds all day long. With everyone sitting around waiting for real winds to show up I took a
13m Century out with 160 foot lines and gave it ago. It launched as I expected and steadily climed up to the zenith. As the kite reached about 100
feet above the lake bed I knew I was in trouble. The kite kept moving towards the zenith as I left the ground. Nothing dramatic as it was more of a
foot every second type lofting. Hanging by my fingers on the handles in full power mode I fingered my way to the other end of the handles were it took
about 40 seconds for the kite to land on the lake bed. After I pulled up my now full shorts, I put the kite away. If I would have had a 6m to 8m kite
on those same lines I would have been out in the buggy.
Now that years have past and I have used longer lines with smaller kites and every type under the sun, in every configuration, I have figured it out.
I am not saying I know everything as I am still learning by trial an error, I call it R&D.
I fly at a small park that has a little league baseball field surrounded by 70 foot christmas trees like most of the west coast. The turbulence in the
field is the worst ever, untill I get the kite above the tree tops were it is very smooth. Not to tell you all to go do this, just saying deal with
your pile of lemons and make lemonade.
Appex buggy, Libre hardcore buggies.
Flexboardz. Blokarts.
PKD Century Soulflys. NPW's. Nasa Stars.
A few other less flown oddballs,
Line sets from 10" to 328" or 2m to 100m.
worlds only AQR that works.
North American distributor for PKD.
"Kite Bugging is not an addiction until you try to quit".
short lines and a 2.4m in clean winds will break 19 ribs, with many of those with muliple breaks, puncture and collapse your left lung, and really
ruin your next 3-4 years, but that just me.
but you are right. You have to work into it, dont go from 20m lines to 100m lines because someone said you could. I fly with a long line setup for my
pleasure and if someone wants to try it out I am there to teach them how. After that I get asked to let them use this or that when we meet up again.
Best way to learn is by having someone teach you, in person.
Appex buggy, Libre hardcore buggies.
Flexboardz. Blokarts.
PKD Century Soulflys. NPW's. Nasa Stars.
A few other less flown oddballs,
Line sets from 10" to 328" or 2m to 100m.
worlds only AQR that works.
North American distributor for PKD.
"Kite Bugging is not an addiction until you try to quit".
If your wind is as bad as you say and as gusty as can be, you have to back up and rethinck things. I sell a lot of the buster soulfly kites to gusty
areas in the centeral USA. Any idea why?
The combat is mostly sold on the west coast, why?
Most of the guys in buggies on the east coast fly depower and phantoms type kites, still asking why?
clean winds- race kites. High AR kites
turbulent/gusty winds- Beginner kites and depowers. Low AR kites
are you catching it?
Wind is ever changing but always the same. This is the part that requires common sense and the ability to say NO FLYING TODAY.
Appex buggy, Libre hardcore buggies.
Flexboardz. Blokarts.
PKD Century Soulflys. NPW's. Nasa Stars.
A few other less flown oddballs,
Line sets from 10" to 328" or 2m to 100m.
worlds only AQR that works.
North American distributor for PKD.
"Kite Bugging is not an addiction until you try to quit".
If you were looking for 2 to 10 you may not end up as disappointed?
I don't have any real experience with the Nasa Star kites but suspect a large one of those may be what you are after? They may start coming up second
hand once the new version is out? Same with the Peak.
Ron is right about technique being a very important piece of the puzzle! Never let your front lines go slack and gravity is your friend. Learn the downturn! :D
From what I can gather the nasa star kites are powered up all the time. This concerns me flying in gusty winds. I always fly a nasa wing as a four
line kite on handles. By flying this way you can control the power of the kite and if you need to you can back off the power.
Susan (npw goddess)
PKD Brooza\'s 2, 3, 4 and 5.5 meter
Libre Bora\'s 6 and 7 meter
Libre stainless full race with standard and big foot light wheels
Nasa wings: npw5 0.4, 0.8, 1.2, 1.7, 2.4, 3.1, 3.9, 4.8, 5.8, 6.9 meters
npw9 3.4, 5.3, 6.0, 8.0, 9.0, 10.0, 11.0, 15.0 meters
Quadrifoil xm for sale