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sotired said..
Is there a problem when you are out and its overpowering for the kite size and you need to oversheet it?
I know you would be better off with the right size for the wind conditions, but if the conditions are very gusty, sometimes the smaller kite is too small in the lulls, and the bigger kite is too big in the gusts.
I have not had any backstalling, probably because it is so windy, but are there any other issues to worry about?
I think you mean trim it in a lot (or to use the common but incorrect term - depower it). Trimming in just gives more slack to the rear lines. Yep trimming is simply shortening the front lines, and the purpose is so that you can reach the bar and ride upright in a normal position, and if you shorten the front lines with the trim system, you are automatically lengthening the rear lines.
Problem is when the rear lines are lengthened steering gets a bit crappy, and on some bars the rears get so loose steering is reduced to the point that its dangerous.
If your kite is too big, trimming will only help a bit and its usually not nice to ride like that. If your kites are 2-3m between sizes then the smaller kite will be the best choice. If you have 4M gaps between sizes, yep often you have an uncomfortable gap and you have to "ride through it" but its usually not fun and its time to rethink your quiver.