Yup, especially avoid the old North Rhino, dangerous kite on water, potentially lethal on land. I would not even sell my old 12m, trashed it.
Yup, especially avoid the old North Rhino, dangerous kite on water, potentially lethal on land. I would not even sell my old 12m, trashed it.
You are welcome to think fixing a bladder a day is fun if you want too. Heck, some of the well known brands even made you do that within the first month of use on a new kite. I would just say that this is not my cup of tea. But to each his own.SaintMark wrote: ↑Sat Oct 13, 2018 4:38 pmdo they really age so fast. can't they be fixed with lots of spinnaker tape (fabric) and shoe goo(valves), or why do all kiters say they suck so bad. Or are they just not as versatile, smaller wind window. When I look at the user manuals from 2008 they all claim to have lots of depower.
Gonna be a Pro???? You need to check your aspirations. Staying alive should be your first concern. If you have not been kiting on your own already, then you have no idea what this means. Go "Pro" after you have stayed alive for a while - like give it 2 years at least.
Because they are dangerous and fly like shit compared to this year's or even a few years ago kites.
Yup - it's a miracle anyone survives until "this year's" kites arrive.NorCalNomad wrote: ↑Sat Nov 10, 2018 7:10 am
Because they are dangerous and fly like shit compared to this year's or even a few years ago kites.
/thread
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