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segler said..
Another data point. My weight is 92 km. With a 6.8 sail I can fly the i76 from 10 kts (with a lot of pumping for takeoff) to 17 kts.
The point is that the i76 has quite a lot speed range. It also has a wide (fore and aft) center of lift balance range. It also has a nice mushy stall.
If I owned only one foil, this i76 would be it. My quiver in Florida is the i76 and nothing else. It covers pretty much all normal wind conditions in Florida. The issue with Florida is finding deep enough water inshore.
I know a couple foilers in the Columbia Gorge who own only the i76 and nothing else. They foil it with sail sizes 3.7 to 6.7 .
(My quiver in the Columbia Gorge, where I live, is AFS, LP, and Moses. We snowbird a couple times every winter to Florida, but we are still stuck in Florida from the covid until it gets safe enough to go back home. Could take a while. We have our own house and van, so it's not terrible.)
Its really interesting, we all have such different experiences on each wing.
Many variables to contend with!
Fresh water versus saltwater, inland winds versus coastal winds, tide, currents, ground swell, voodoo chop, board type, sail size...you have rider height and weight!
Then you have foil set ups, fuse positions, mast base pressure, boom height, harness line length and foot strap locations...Basically what works for one will feel totally foreign to another
