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rgmacca forum posts in last 60 days

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rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

Tuesday,
24 Feb 2026 8:32am
I think Duotone do a stick on pad with inserts.
Reply in Topic: Rip up and stow parawing
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

18 Feb 2026 8:58pm
I had a BRM Ka'a 5.4m did not like it for all the attributes you want. I wanted a more up wind focused PW. Some cheaper used kit kicking around.
Reply in Topic: Rip up and stow parawing
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

18 Feb 2026 8:58pm
I had a BRM Ka'a 5.4m did not like it for all the attributes you want. I wanted a more up wind focused PW. Some cheaper used kit kicking around.
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

18 Feb 2026 8:46pm
At that point if you are an f-one user it makes it easier to jump ship to another brand.
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

17 Feb 2026 6:53am
Disclosure, I'm not very good at PW(had one 9 months).

I have gusty winds and wind blown sea swell to work with.
I really enjoy learning PW, but finding right conditions to do it in is hard, so little progression as don't want to miss out on a good wing day. when it is good conditions, swell, I have loads more fun on a wing, just more versatile. so partly my bad for not pushing through with PW.
The take away for me is, try and make it easier with a ML board and bigger foil, make it as easy as possible to get on foil. Expect a struggle, small wind range to start with and line tangles. Wing has a far better low end.
But there is a pure joy in trying something different and guys/girls are making it look so easy, so it's achievable. I like you would love to ditch wings for PWs but honestly I don't think it will give the same amount of easy fun as a wing, just my thoughts.

I do have a 2023 slick, and find it ok as a wing but not great compared to my others. Yes it's a pain flagged out.
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

14 Feb 2026 4:47am
Select to expand quote
BWalnut said..
I've been thinking a lot about how we all likely desire something a little different from reviews. Radical footage, technical details, honest assessments, critical feedback, average Joe reports. There's a wide spectrum of information that can be included.

Personally, I lean hard on technical elements. Shapes, dimensions, setup details. Leaning on the numbers at the start strips away the marketing hype and gives me something objective to solidify my thought on. I also put a lot of value in review duration. Ideally 500 miles (800km) for any comprehensive review. 1000 miles (1600km) is even better as I think longer reviews reveal durability, as well as the little quirks and nuanced tricks that can only be found with time on foil in a variety of conditions.

I put less value in ride footage. I want to know the riders dims and style but beyond that I rarely see meaningful changes in ride footage from one video to the next of the same foiler.

I'm curious where others land. What makes a review truly valuable to you, and what is just noise?


I'm similar to you, like facts. Real world experience of good and bad. less use of "awesome" " transforming" " best ever" " game changer"
there are always things that can be improved and not minor things like colour ( unless a PW).

Comparing to other products in same ball park, see how they stack up. transparency, what is the hidden hand giving.
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

11 Feb 2026 8:26pm
Select to expand quote
ddgp said..
If the 3 attachment could be done in 2 for the PR. It would be a great upgrade imo. Less glove wear hehe

I'm not too handy but I think it could be easily done as they did with the Flow DWing V2

Adding both bars for reference

I'm considering talking to a paragliding workshop specialist and see if they can do it. But scared of going off some milimitres can screw the overall performance.










It looks easy enough to try, you could always revert if did not work out. Quick bridge line tied from A-C lines, maintaining original length of B lines from bar would give an idea of how it would feel. let us know how you get on.
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

10 Feb 2026 4:46pm
I switched to Duotone carbon from Axis (ALU).

My thinking was that the saddle style (f-one titan 1) was a stronger connection. so which is better from an engineering prospective.

I see the Axis carbon mast getting remoulded after wear issues.
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

10 Feb 2026 3:53am
Select to expand quote
BWalnut said..
Omar (Maretasurf) seems to be frothing on the Power Packs:
?si=8xoqKTHoY1IbTcli


Impressive skills, looks a bit gnarly
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

26 Jan 2026 3:47am
Love that board hilly.
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

19 Jan 2026 4:30am
Select to expand quote
cleverku said..
I've got about 30 sessions under my belt and consider myself an advance beginner (can fly straight but still can't nail a jybe).

I recently switched brands from Cabrinha to Axis and got out on the water for the first time last week. I found myself really struggling with the new gear. My main issues seemed to be take off. As soon as I would lift off the foil seemed to always be in a stalled position leading me to eventually crash down. I tried moving my feet forward on the board but then found the nose digging in too much before take-off. This is unlike my previous Cabrinha gear which would generally just take-off with speed aided only slightly with a small kick to back of the board. When I sometimes managed to get flying I struggled to keep flying due to stability issues.

My gear setup was a 960 Sptifire, a Black Short fuse, a 325 Progressive tail, and a 90cm HM carbon mast. Note I've paired all of these things with little knowledge or advice on the brand, hence thinking I've made some wrong choices.

Just wondering where/how I should start trimming the setup to fix the issue. Here are my thought on the potential issues, keen to hear other peoples thoughts:
- Mast too far forward in the tracks leading back foot pressure stalling the board
- Too small a tail for the wing. Would a 350 or larger tail be more suitable for a 960 wing?
- Incorrect length/type of fuse. I thought using a Black Short fuse would be the most stable given it's the longest one I have.
- Too small a front wing for my skill. Given the area of the 960 is just under 1200 I assumed that was large enough and comparable to what I was previously on (Cabrinha 1050 H Mk2 wing or 1300 X wing). I also bought the 720 and 840 Spitfires in anticipation of wanting to eventually step down in size after getting used to the bigger 960.
- Tail shim required? I didn't use shims on my Cabrinha gear so this tweak is new to me.
- Too ambitious a step up in gear for my skill. Is the Spitfire line designed to be unstable and not right for me.

Any advice to help quicken the solutioning highly appreciated. Thanks.


What was the size of Cabrinha kit you came from, and your body weight, board size.
Noththing wrong with the kit, just different technique required. I remember switching to Axis and using the HPS series, I just kept breaching then slapping down. Once I got used to them they were great foils. Ppl use the spitfire to downwind with so have plenty of glide, not as much as the higher AR foils obviously but still good foils.
Reply in Topic: Duotone stash V2
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

16 Jan 2026 4:00am
?si=YsDnlya7ibsdyTTV
Gav likes it.
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

15 Jan 2026 7:44am
www.duotonesports.com/en/uk/products/duotone-stash-2026-42260-3550?_kx=CcQH8LQYZukltw5Npd8tOYMqvld9tZQvnc6QzTwCPbs.WvpNAe
Ditched the double skin wing tips. With V2s will be interesting times for PW.
Reply in Topic: Brm Paia
rgmacca
rgmacca

471 posts

6 Jan 2026 5:46am
So what is the consensus on the Paia?

Does it work well in gusty winds or more suited to steady wind.
My spot can be 10- 25knts and my 4.3 pocket rocket is very challenging.
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