Hi All,
For most of the time we have had Ozone kites we have been mostly flying the Edges and Sport II's whichhave been great, but I have intentionally neglected the Lights as I figured they were more of a school kite and would have little interest to the average rider.
Today in conditions ranging from 17 odd knots up to around 30 knots I gave the 7m Light II a run on the surfboard in head to double overhead waves and west to WSW winds (pretty much directly onshore most of the time ... challenging to say the least!).
Bars and bags been done to death so I'll speak only of the kite and it's performance.
Firstly, the Light II is only 3 struts all connected by a good one pump system and with the same narrow leading edge and micro thin struts as the Edge II and Sport II, it took seconds to inflate to 10 psi.
Self launched easy enough and after adjusting the back line tension I grabbed the Airush 6'4" Converse Surfboard. I had no problem getting out throught the rather largish waves even in the onshore wind. The Kite points really well upwind and had nice bar pressure, a bit more than the Edge II and Sport II, but still light and comfortable.
The power was adequate in the lighter winds and I was able to stay upwind and beyond the break in the lighter winds by sining it quickly but it wasn't incredible, but being fair it was only a 7m. In the strong winds the kite just performed better and better. I never really got overpowered on it but it probably only nudged 30 knots at it's peak.
The Light II, turns quite responsively when the bar is pulled in for power and moves quite quickly with pressure on the bar. When you sheet the power right out with the bar, the canopy flutters and the kite slows down significantly which is helpful to stop the kite racing to and then thru neutral. It depowers about 90% by letting go of the bar without luffing.
At one point I managed to get on the face of a rather large wave and had to turn towards the kite to avoid an overhanging lip. The lines went totally slack and I bottom turned around the carnage to stay on the face and used the waves power to speed along. A second or two later of riding the wave and I looked up to see that the kite had drifted back nicely and had retensioned the lines and I quickly looped it to pull away from the bomb close out. I couldn't believe it, I had some serious confidence in the kite after that incident and really started to have a lot more fun with the kite and tried stuff that I may not have done due to concern for the kites wellbeing in the big surf.
It still boosts nicely to get over the large walls and was a blast riding it in the most challenging conditions. Never used the depower at all and rode it fully powered the whole time. It just felt great through the range of winds and was stable to as.
I never dropped the kite once and it behaved absolutley flawlessly as a wave kite. It's light weight and lower aspect ratio make it perfectly suited to wave riding and I can't wait for tomorrow to try it in more cross on conditions. This has been the best wave kite I have ridden to date.
Demo's are welcomed to see for yourself. I'll be at Cottesloe tomorrow and possibly Scarborough on Saturday.
Good winds,