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XYZ said..
after watching Naish "light find foiling explained" my first impression was "this is it." But when I looked into I have discovered that all the foil manufacturers report impossible to achieve results.
Companies aren't exaggerating. After almost a year of practice (multiple times a week), me (86kg, 192cm), an avarage windsurfer, planing jibes, 33kts gps max on slalomgear, speedloop, but nothing too extreme, can fly with a 4.8 in 10kts gusts and keep flying below that. Ofcourse some things remain impossible, and the foil I use for racing/lightwind is one which I can keep in the air for some time by pumping even without a sail. Ofcourse in those minimal winds i do more often rig an 8.6 just for the extra power, but I've found out I can fly with really minimal sailsize.
At the defi I've seen philipe canari do a backloop with a 4.0 swart sail on his tiny when people with 9.6m slalomsails couldn't even get planing.
It does however take a lot of practice/ technique to get this kind of performance out of windfoiling kit, and ofcourse a foil which is meant for these kind of winds (like the horue, or my foil of preference the Lok?foil LK1 1200). In the Netherlands and france almost nobody uses the naish, so I couldn't comment on that. If you try to get this kind of light wind performance out of a Pryde for example you wouldn't make it, primairily because the pryde isn't meant for this kind of thing.
As for the FRPgear. I've tested I think 12 different foils extensively and own 5. The FRPgear isn't a hydrofoil, it's a planingassistant, and I believe it works, I just don't see the benefit over buying a full foil for 800? (mantafoils, pryde alu or the new Zulu race which is really beautiful).
I'm not sponsored by any of the foilbrands mentioned above, different ones even..