I have no idea what to do up there because I have never gone there.
I've been kite buggying since 1992 and have never been lofted so I am not sure that I would agree with the "...only a matter of time..." assertion.
That sounds like a water-kiter's world view or a kite jumper's world view. Not being either of those, I can do my thing with much less kite. My rules
for loft prevention, OBE prevention, and general risk reduction are 1) fly the smallest possible kite that allows you to do what you want to do, 2)
fly on a long-throw depower bar, and 3) trim your kite so that your bar position is in the middle of the throw-range at full speed.
All the usual safety guidance about weather conditions, flying location, gear, and training apply, but I find it is the 3 above that are least
appreciated. They are my 3 ounces of prevention.
I fly: Charger II 6.5m * Charger II 8m * Charger II 10m * Scorpion 10 (for sale) * Phantom II 12m * F-Arc 1200 * Venom 13m
I ride: Peter Lynn XR+ on Midis * Flexifoil Midi/Barrow * Peter Lynn Comp on Barrows * Peter Lynn XR+ (needs a fork)
The short simple answer is to never let the kite get behind you. Longer answer is below.
The clip you posted is a good example. Kiter traveling across the screen from right to left. From kiters perspective kite is roughly around 9
o'clock. At the 4 second mark kiter sends the kite from 9 o'clock to 1 o'clock ('behind' the kiter relative to direction of travel) and achieves lift
off. If you like getting big air, that is the basics of how it is done. If you want to stay on the ground simply don't do that. Now of course it's
important to use some common sense here also. If your in bad weather conditions don't park the kite overhead at 12 oclock while you talk with friends
or eat your sandwich. You could be lifted if weather conditions suddenly change. Same thing goes if your flying location usually has turbulent wind.
Of course as you become more experienced and fly more heavily powered the risk of getting hurt increases since we all sometimes make mistakes.
Flying a smaller kite for that days wind conditions can help minimize risk but also minimizes speed and excitement. Part of learning is finding the
right balance for you. Achieving kiting nirvana will soon follow . Take it
easy, start slow, and work your way up.
What kteguru wrote is the real deal here. In a buggy, generally the higher the winds the smaller the kites, and the faster those kites are moving in
the sky. Once winds get particularly high a lot of our storm kites become the proverbial "wasp on a string" darting madly all over the place in the
sky if you don't calm your ass down and make small deliberate movements. Honestly, I think the chances of an OBE go up as the wind goes up, mainly
because of this wasp on a string issue, or maybe that's just me.
One thing you can do to guard against OBEs (or at least try to control things) is to develop and install an Automatic Quick Release. Various people
have made various AQRs and they are generally DIY projects; no big company sells them. There are a lot of ways to make AQRs and likely as many
opinions about optimal designs as there are AQRs. I certainly lay no claim to having the best ideas in this department, anything but that.
That clip is deceptive, he has an an updraft caused by the mountains in the background that keeps him up much longer. He also knows exactly what he is
doing to get maximum airtime, jump to kite loop to a ton of heli loops.
I've never been unintentionally lifted more than a few feet off the ground with a depower kite. I have however had jumps go way higher than expected
due to gust/luck. I used to go out in high wind where I was very light on my feet with with the bar out, bar in would cause me to get t-bagged. I
pulled the safety release a lot when it would get out of hand. My tips are
1. Keep the kite at the edge of the window in high winds, preferably off to one side. This stops the tendency for the kite to accelerate, and speed =
power.
2. When in doubt, flag it out. If the kite luffs and you know it will reinflate and surge, pull the release. You can replace the kite if it gets
damaged, but you can't replace your bones. If you fall down, flag it out. My venom is on its 3rd set of spars because of how many times I've flagged
it.
3. If you get lofted, and don't know what it going on, do not turn the bar. Kite loops are way, WAY worse than having a kite overhead. A lot of the
times I was pulled out of the buggy I was disoriented and most of my attempts to steer the kite made things worse.
4. If you do know what is going on, try to keep the kite overhead. You hopefully won't get lifted to high. The kite acts like a giant pendulum and if
you get lifted it will try to fly up wind of you. This will cause you to come down really fast.
5. This one a lot harder to learn. If you just keep the kite overhead, you will get pulled down wind and the kite will set you down rather hard. If
you zig zag the kite overhead, you will have much more lift and be able to land softly. You just repeat the "redirect" part of the jump over and over
untill you land. You definitely shouldn't try that if you don't know how to jump because you may end up making it worse.
6. Fly aggressively in low winds. You can feel what powers the kite up powers and what powers it down. Also learn to do small jumps, so you know what
to expect.
Arcs - Charger I 8m, 10m, 12m, Venom I 13m - F-Arc 1200, 1600
Single Skin - Born-Kite LongStar2
Fixed Bridles - Pansh Legend 4.5m - Peter Lynn Voltage 3m
its not lofting if it was intentional
but try to do what he did...it seemed to have worked out
dream it at night repeatedly till its second nature and
by all means don't panic
It's nice to see a bit of chit chat. The forum is usually so quiet now a days. Where's B-roc when you need him:D
Here I am and I agree with everyone else. I've been kiting since 2005 and have never been "lofted". I was almost drowned by some guy in a buggy once
:o but that's a different story
That being said, I have boosted by surprise when I either poorly misdirected my kite too quickly, or I've left it parked over head in strong winds
while talking to people or taking a break. As others said, if the kite isn't redirected behind you, or left flying above you in strong winds... the
likelihood of accidental loftings go way down. Accidental drownings are associated with the company you keep :P
@Dean... you been to Nahant at all recently? I really want to go but haven't been motivated to drive and deal with the extra dog and beach walkers
that COVID has spawned.
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
Thank you all for chiming in. Snake was closest to what I was looking for. What to do when if/when it does happen so you don't have to ever explain
to your spouse how close you came to death... I also take the points of this intentional jump not being a reasonable example of lofting since he was
trying hard to get high and stay up with kite movement.
I'm new to depower and harness in general. I am confident in brake control with my fixed bridle kites but am worried about losing control with the
depower kite. I had a fall the other day and luckily the kite was flying down at the time because I did not think to let go or pull the release and
if it had been heading to zenith I am sure I would not have done anything useful until after it was too late.
Haven't been to Nahant recently Broc. Since they're charging an arm and two legs to get in kind of ruined it. I'm building on 2 acres near lake
Sunapee so that may be my go to location. You're welcome to stop by whenever you kite sunapee :wee:
Glad I could help. My biggest take away is learn to pull the release/let go of you lose control! As others have mentioned, it is pretty rare to just
get lifted with a static kite above your head. Most of the time the pilot let's the kite fly overhead and does an accidental jump.
In the paragliding world, pilots used to ridicule other pilots for throwing their reserve parachutes be it meant that you didn't have the skills to
fix the glider. That lead to a lot of pilots hitting the ground with the parachute still in the bag, never deployed. About 5 years ago there was a
massive shift in thinking, and now pilots will ridicule pilots for not throwing the reserve, even if they fixed the glider and didn't have an
incident. This shift in thinking has saved a lot of pilots. I'm not sure where the kite world stands on flagging the kite when things go south, but my
opinion is to flag it out and ensure you are safe, rather than trying to save face by toughing it out.
Arcs - Charger I 8m, 10m, 12m, Venom I 13m - F-Arc 1200, 1600
Single Skin - Born-Kite LongStar2
Fixed Bridles - Pansh Legend 4.5m - Peter Lynn Voltage 3m
I'm not sure where the kite world stands on flagging the kite when things go south, but my opinion is to flag it out and ensure you are safe, rather
than trying to save face by toughing it out.
It would seem that someone (male or female) comfortable with their position in life would do what was reasonable and optimal to live to see another
day. If that means "flagging out" then so be it. I for one have many higher priorities in life than playing he-man.
"Flagging out" is not in the glossary of kite terms. I assume you mean pull second release to completely let it go?
It's not a term I typically use myself, but by "flagging out" it is meant that you pop your chicken loop. Depending on how your DP is strung things
will go somewhat differently, but the end result is the same, viz., you're still attached to your kite but it is now essentially powerless.
If you have a traditional DP line set it is set up in what is at times called a 4.5 setup. You've got your four primary lines (two power and two
"brake" lines) and you've got a 5th line that comes through your chicken loop and terminates in a SS ring. The other end of that 5th line is attached
to one single power line part way up towards the kite. When you pop your chicken loop (and presuming you've got that SS ring attached to something
affixed to you) three of the kite lines will develop a ton of slack but one single power line will stay under tension. The kite will "flag out" from
that one power line.
Some newer DP kites have a true dedicated 5th line that goes from that SS ring all the way to the kite. Many of the newest kites have a "re-ride"
system that pulls the kite inward to the center like an accordion in this situation making a kite ball of sorts.
Usually the cord that you attach the SS ring to has a sort of detaching mechanism too in case you need to completely free yourself from the kite. If
you break a line or have something happen such that your kite starts to twist again and again you may not be able to flag it out when you pull the
chicken loop and the kite will continue to act possessed and can be dangerous to you and folks around you. Then you need to free yourself completely.
The other main reason I can think of off the top of my head is needing to free yourself from what has become a sea anchor to keep from drowning.
Altitude makes a huge difference in that decision. 5-10 foot off the ground and you will hopefully be fine. No damage to twisted ankle or similar. 30
foot off the ground and you may be doing unscheduled femur inspections.
Altitude makes a huge difference in that decision. 5-10 foot off the ground and you will hopefully be fine. No damage to twisted ankle or similar. 30
foot off the ground and you may be doing unscheduled femur inspections.
Individual results may vary. Just ask Spenser (soliver).
Just to complete WindstrucS-P-A-M-L-I-N-K-s bar line up... There are 5 line and 4.5 which he described, but by far the most common these days are 4
line bars. Your bar shoots up one of the power lines on QR release, called single line safety. Almost all LEIs these days use a 4 line equal length
bar. Flysurfer had been using 4.5 forever, but recently has settled on 4 for their foils/LEIs and 5 (re ride) for the Peaks.
Definitely practice small jumps to get a feeling for it, preferably over water if you can.
Just to complete WindstrucS-P-A-M-L-I-N-K-s bar line up... There are 5 line and 4.5 which he described, but by far the most common these days are 4
line bars. Your bar shoots up one of the power lines on QR release, called single line safety. Almost all LEIs these days use a 4 line equal length
bar. Flysurfer had been using 4.5 forever, but recently has settled on 4 for their foils/LEIs and 5 (re ride) for the Peaks.
Definitely practice small jumps to get a feeling for it, preferably over water if you can.
Thanks Jeff. I'm an inland land flyer and get zero exposure to LEIs and other water kites. Nice they've progresses to 4 lines as described. Less to
tangle, lower parasitic drag and all that.
The definition of "flagging out" seems to be more applicable to LEIs and Arcs than standard foils. My foils, 4 or 5 line, all have a safety release
on the bar side that "flags" or "kills" the kite to either my leash (5 line) or my bar (4 line). So my chicken loop stays attached but I'm cutting
the bar away or cutting the power lines away from the bar. You may be describing the same thing but my foils don't "flag" out the same way that Arcs
flag out. Not arguing, just trying to add clarity for a new flier who could cut his whole system away if he doesn't understand the safety system and
releases everything into the wind.
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
On a 4 line bar, you're releasing 2 steering lines and one power line, the bar slides up the other power line still attached to your chicken loop.
That flags the kite, whether it is foil or LEI or SS. 4.5 bar runs up a line attached part way up one of the power lines (so similar effect), but
releasing immediately flags that line from the moment you hit the QR and the .5 line gets tension. I think on your Gins, if you have them as 5 line (I
removed the 5th line bridles on my Gins), fold from the specific 5th line bridles in the center. Definitely a solid system, but adds more complexity
and extra bridles that most modern kites have moved away from. Newer foils (apart from the 5 line snow kites) all flag from 4 or 4.5.
And you're making miss my Eskimos :D
Oh, and Windstruck.... don't worry, even with standardization, companies still do everything they can to mess with things and make you buy their gear.
High Y, Low V, different QR systems etc... I'm going back to my single line diamond kites and a Charlie Brown kite eating tree...
There are times and places that call for using the safety as a landing technique as well as a safety. Snowkiting can have some difficult landing
situations where the safety is the only way to land. The technique is to get the kite as near to landing
as possible before throwing the chicken loop. Better a balled up kite than an injury! We all want to be king kiter that never needs help, but even a
destroyed kite is cheaper than a stay in the ICU.
Reactors 2.8 3.5 6.9
Peaks 4m 6m 12m
HQ Neo2 11m Ozone Chrono V2 15m WASP 5m
Flexi wide axle w/mids and runners
Skis Nordic skates and winter stuff
Quatro Wing Foilboard Slingshot Foils
NAPKA US06
There are times and places that call for using the safety as a landing technique as well as a safety. Snowkiting can have some difficult landing
situations where the safety is the only way to land. The technique is to get the kite as near to landing
as possible before throwing the chicken loop. Better a balled up kite than an injury! We all want to be king kiter that never needs help, but even a
destroyed kite is cheaper than a stay in the ICU.
Could not agree more. A incident you walk away from is far better than one you are carried away from..