I got my first opportunity to kite ski with the Bego 400 yesterday. I'll be doing a full review of this kite in the spring after I've boarded with it
but on snow it was FAST.
The winds were flaky and I started out with my 2.5 and that was great for the gusts but shoddy for the lulls so I went to the 400.
On the harness when the brake lines go slack it doesn't turn as nice as static flying. Tried shortening the brake lines but that didn't help too much
so I just adopted my technique a bit and no problems. I am going to shorten my power rings next time out to see if that helps a little as I think the
extra slack in the brake lines pull on the TE when harnessed in.
Any how, the kite had amazing upwind ability. Others were out with a 13m Venom, 10m Frenzy, Quadrfoil X series (5-6 meter it looked) and me with the
400. I got upwind of them all - though I'm not sure how upwind they wanted to go, I wanted to get way up to the untracked stuff and the Bego pulled
hard at the edge and if you dab the brakes, it pulls even harder.
When taking long runs across the lake it's amazing how the speed and power just continue to build. The only thing that I can really compare the kite
to is a high performance car with a standard transmission. It may sound hokey but you really can feel the kite building its power. Than you hit the
brakes a bit to shift, release and more power. Build more speed, hit the brakes and you shift again. It seemed like it could go on like that for a
while but I was running out of lake and I was skiing on 6" of dust under about 1/2" of frozen crust so it made turning downwind tricky when fully
powered as edges were easily caught and I didn't want to dump at that speed.
I didn't jump with the kite but I could have easily and there were a number of occassions I worked hard to stay on the ground (conditions weren't
ideal for jumping due to the crust on the snow and how easily it grabbed your edges).
Normally when I turn at the end of my runs, I hit the brakes a bit to slow the kite through an uploop and then release them as I come through my turn
so the kite powers up and off I go. I couldn't do that with the bego because when you hit the brakes the kite powers up hard and even at the top of
the window it is still pulling hard and given the conditions I needed the kite to tack more slowly so I went with pull turns on the power lines with
loose brakes and that helped.
The kite pulls all over the window - low, high, top - doesn't matter it just either lifts or pulls and it just keeps on going.
The winds were flaky here and there but no inverts or bowties and as long as there is tension on the lines the kite responds well.
More to come later as I continue to get to know the kite but for now, in summary... Bego 400 = serious pull, serious speed and while I didn't jump you
can tell the kite has serious pop and will take you where you want to go.
Great first traction session with it.
Depower Quiver: 14m Gin Eskimo, 10m Gin Eskimo III, 6m Gin Yeti, 4.5m Gin Yeti (custom bridle and mixer)
Fixed Bridle Quiver: MAC Bego 400, JOJO ET Instinct 2.5 & 5.5, Lil Devil 1.5, Sting 1.2
Rides: Ground Industries