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robinofthehood said..
Hi kvek!
So you only ride one board, one wing and two front wings? Which wind range do you've got right now with this combo? And how would you discribe your level as wingfoiler? How many years / how many sessions per year are you out on the water approximately?
Hi robinofthehood,
About my WF experience:
I am a long-time windsurfer and I believe this helped me a lot with my WF progression. I had a first few hours on my friend's equipment a bit less than a year ago and I received my equipment around 10 months ago. I had some 70 sessions in total some 170 hours on that equipment (some of those even in the non-foiling conditions). I can jibe consistently and tack on my stronger side maybe 50%. Every now and then I jump, but not too often. Here is nice drone footage (I am the one with the helmet) so that you can get a better idea:
www.seabreeze.com.au/forums/Wing-Foiling/Wind-Wings/wing-board-Gong-lethal-feedback#2769945About the equipment:
I used my setup(s) from sub-10 kts to 20-something kts.
In low wind conditions, after I manage to pump on the foil, preferably using some gust, it is quite easy to stay flying as long as there is some wind, a way below 10 kts is quite enough to stay on the foil.
In the strong wind conditions, with a 4.5 wing, it gets a bit too much, that is why I bought a 3.2 wing but was not able to properly test it yet. With the smaller foil and a 4.5 wing, I can foil when windsurfers fully powered ride their wave equipment but can still keep on going when they don't even think about going out. I guess the strongest wind I was riding with this equipment was over 20 kts, maybe nearing 30 kts but I don't know for sure.
I hope that the smaller foil with the new 3.2 wing will keep me comfortably foiling in some 30 kts.
For 3.2 wing, charts say, it should work for me from 20 to 35 kts.
For 4.5 wing, charts say, it should work from 10 to 30 kts.