My test on a hydrofoil last week in a wind growing up from 7 to 11 knots at the end of the one hour session.
With some comments to better catch what I am doing or trying with it.
I really love this kite , good balance between easy and fun which is quite rare actually. I would say overall that is in-between a Conceptair Pulsion and a F-one Halo. And far cheaper.
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Sceotend (Mon Jan 31, 2022 7:27 am) • bitxopalo (Mon Jan 31, 2022 10:20 am)
Hello Regis, grate video, for me it is more a list of things to learn how to do jaja.
I am having more hours in the water with a hidrofoil and Hyspers and having a grate time in waves and downwind runs; but keep postponing training of all those upwind turns that you show. I wonder how much a double skin kite will help me learn them? But I keep using these single skins that are just so easy to use (setup etc...)... some day...
I think you could have several answers about the impact of kite type to do such turns depending on rider's feeling ...
My view is that double skin:
- helps on one side because it gives you a higher lift which helps for the balancing and to keep foiling-up (less touch-down of the board on the water)
- does not help on the other side because they are less agile than single skins, so take more time and anticipation to regain pull after the trick
I did similar turns with both Spirit V2 and hysper V2, both were functioning with small adjustments on timings. The easiest for me was with the Elf jocker5 (higher ratio seems more easy, except maybe for jumped jibes where Jocker was more 'scaring' and requires more engagement on the kite control and less possibility to finish by a loop in case of need)
Short line also helps a lot (which I do not have, here 24m) and a large hydrofoil to keep the planning at low speed before regaining pull (but IMO less important than all above parameters).
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jaja... I am just laughing at myself... I thought that a laugh was universal jaja.
This reminds me of a time a friend from Finland came to visit and we had an exchange student from Thailand; when we all said how a rooster sounds like, we all said very different things. jaja
These users thanked the author geron for the post:
How do other languages indicate laughter on the internet?
English - "hahaha"
Spanish - "jajaja"
Arabic - "ههههه" ("hhhhh" - Arabic doesn't write short vowels, so that could be read as "hahahahaha")
Thai - "55555" ("5" in Thai is pronounced "ha")
French - "hahaha", "héhéhé"
Russian - "хахаха" ("hahaha"), "бгггггг" ("bgggg"), "гггггг" ("gggggg"), "олололо" ("olololo")
Ukrainian - "бгггггг" ("bhhhh"), "гггггг" ("hhhhhh")
Catalan - "hahaha"
Portuguese - "hahaha", "ahahah", "rá!", "kkkkk", "rsrsrs"
Korean - "ㅋㅋ" ("kk"), "ㅎㅎㅎ" ("hhh")
Japanese - "wwww", "ふふふ" ("huhuhu")
Mandarin - "哈哈哈哈哈" ("hahahahaha"), "呵呵呵呵呵" ("hehehehehe")
Indonesian - "wkwkwkwk"
Swedish - "hahaha", "hehehe", "hihihi"
Norwegian - "hæhæhæ", "høhøhø"
Vietnamese - "hihihi"
Ha ha ha, but no, "jaja" is not even close to an international slang for "Ha ha ha", I think it only exist in Spanish?
And you are from Mexico Geron, I can see, speaking Spanish I believe.
I only speak English/German/French besides Danish (and Norwegian and Swedish as very close), and as you can see from Sbrinckman's post nothing comes close to "jaja".
In Danish it is "Ha ha ha" or "He he he" just like in many other languages, and sometimes "Hi hi hi" or "Hø hø hø" or "Hæ hæ hæ" like Swedish and Norwegian - thats why I did not understand "jaja" - my mistake....
I learned something new