Kite Landboarding is probably the newest form of power kiting. It is fairly easy to learn, fun, and there is plenty of good gear available commercially. When Kite Landboarding, the pilot stands on a small, light mountain board while flying a kite that pulls the pilot and board. The pilot steers the kite landboard by leaning backwards and forwards. For power the pilot flies a steerable kite of 10 ft2 (1 m2) to 110 ft2 (10 m2). The kite pulls the pilot and board much as a sail pulls a sailboat. The board can go upwind, downwind or across the wind at speeds from 5 mph (8 kph) to 50 mph (80 kph) or higher.
Kite landboards are quite manueverable and easily controlled. The pilot can steer a course between objects, accelerate or deccelerate at will and easily stop the board. The board can safely approach people and even turn circles around them. Similarly, the kite is easily steered around trees, sand dunes and other kites.
With Kite Landboarding, aside from the obvious need for a kite board and a kite, kite landboarding requires only a large, open space and a some wind. How much space and how much wind depend on what gear the flier has and what the pilot wants to do. It is possible to board in as little as 2 mph (3.2 kph) of wind with a very large kite of 80 ft2 (7.2 m2) or as much as 30 mph (48 kph) of wind with a very small kite of about 10 ft2 (1 m2). Hard packed beaches, dry lake beds, grass and pavement are all viable options. Some provide more room, some provide more friction. With higher friction comes a need for more power which means bigger kites for the given wind. The most popular surfaces are beaches and dry lake bed as the provide some of the best and broadest rolling surfaces, but a mown field can be quite fun and is a common choice. Pavement is fast and provides the best grip, but it is also the most hazardous of surfaces.
For kites, the person doing kite landboarding has a wide range to choose from. Two-line and 4-line soft parafoils, stacked FlexiFoils, stacked wings and single wings are all used and are all competitive. Most popular of these are the 2-line and 4- line parafoils. They are easy to setup and handle on the ground, stable in flight, and are available from a lot of manufacturers. Which is better is generally a matter of taste and of the pilots flying interest. Recreational buggiers--especially in the U.S. have a bent towards quadline rigs while competitive buggiers often prefer dual line kites. Typical line lengths for the kites vary from 50 ft (15 m) to 200 ft (61 m).
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I found your site last week, called you up and got my first powerkite from your shop the day after that. I ended up with a radsails 3.0 which I'm totally happy with - unsurprising as your advice could not be better informed. Thank you again for the single greatest retail experience I ever had. If there is any justice you'll go a long way with your business! Hope to see you at White Horse sometime soon :-)
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