This is a fantastic explanation Mr Tux, this man knows what he's talking about and he put a lot of experience and thought into his response. Thanks Jake Moore. The real art of kiting is in attaining the downwind momentum (speed) and then using your board's edge and your body to convert that to upwind, like a tether that can be tightened or released. Tethering off? Just get a rubber band, pull back and.....twang! Medic! Dont be stupid.jakemoore wrote:How many people have to say it: ITS A BAD IDEA!
There was a video of somebody teaching beginners the way you described 7 or 8 years ago. The beginner looped the kite was picked up 2 or three feet and slammed into the ground hard repeatedly until the kite crashed. There are many many videos of people doing variations of tethered flying where the tether or more likely kite breaks resulting in a fall.
The problem is that kite speed generates line tension. Line tension increases kite speed. The fact that you get dragged downwind a little when you fly the kite in the powerzone deep is good negative feedback that reduces line tension, kite speed and power. Line tension and kite power are normally limited by your weight or the edge you can hold. If you tether the kite, with or without a person in between, you can generate forces far far greater than that if you just have the kiter fly the kite.
You express concern about a beginner getting lofted. Just don't start overpowered. You express concern about being dragged downwind. No big deal. Its called scudding and its a great way for a beginner to learn how to generate power with a traction kite, and its a great way to learn the balance you need to stand on a board with a kite. If anything, just hold the beginners harness for a minute when launching, but even then if they are dragged down wind a little it slacks the lines and reduces power, really thats the best outcome if they make a pilot error. Also, this is a good time to teach them when to drop the bar.
A number of people here have taught children. My 9 y/o daughter who is 55 pounds flies 4 and 6 meter kites on the buggy and ATB. For the reasons stated above, I don't even like people to hold her harness, because then the kite will generate more power than she would have if she were flying alone. I would never ever consider a tether.
Jake
Nico wrote:Done it a few years back and can only advise you to listen to everyone here: don't do it.
I used a sea anchor and long line to it. Did the superman through the window thing, and had a blast, but also had the biggest scare of my life when things went pearshaped.
On land it would have been fatal.
Nico
this is what will happen to you if you are lucky, if you are not lucky you will die!!!supertux1 wrote:Has anyone tried flying a big kite by anchoring themselves to the ground via the kiting harness and/or a rock climbing harness? Eg using an, ice screw, screw in ground stake etc...
Specifically I'm thinking about a kite that attaches to the harness via chicken loop, then anchoring the harness to the ground. Would this put too much stress on the kite if it can't actually pull? Would it limit the mobility of the flyer too much?
Just trying to explore options for preventing a smaller kiter from being lifted or dragged while they make the transition from trainer to big kite.
Yeah for the record I'm not suggesting doing what has been demonstrated in these videos, which is making the fatal mistake of using a tether that allows the kiter to be lifted and dropped several feet. I am simply wondering if it is at all feasible to make it safe for the kiter and kite to be set up in such a way that there is no chance that they can be pulled into a position they do not want to be in if they mistakenly put the kite somewhere they shouldn't.windrupted wrote:This is a fantastic explanation Mr Tux, this man knows what he's talking about and he put a lot of experience and thought into his response. Thanks Jake Moore. The real art of kiting is in attaining the downwind momentum (speed) and then using your board's edge and your body to convert that to upwind, like a tether that can be tightened or released. Tethering off? Just get a rubber band, pull back and.....twang! Medic! Dont be stupid.jakemoore wrote:How many people have to say it: ITS A BAD IDEA!
There was a video of somebody teaching beginners the way you described 7 or 8 years ago. The beginner looped the kite was picked up 2 or three feet and slammed into the ground hard repeatedly until the kite crashed. There are many many videos of people doing variations of tethered flying where the tether or more likely kite breaks resulting in a fall.
The problem is that kite speed generates line tension. Line tension increases kite speed. The fact that you get dragged downwind a little when you fly the kite in the powerzone deep is good negative feedback that reduces line tension, kite speed and power. Line tension and kite power are normally limited by your weight or the edge you can hold. If you tether the kite, with or without a person in between, you can generate forces far far greater than that if you just have the kiter fly the kite.
You express concern about a beginner getting lofted. Just don't start overpowered. You express concern about being dragged downwind. No big deal. Its called scudding and its a great way for a beginner to learn how to generate power with a traction kite, and its a great way to learn the balance you need to stand on a board with a kite. If anything, just hold the beginners harness for a minute when launching, but even then if they are dragged down wind a little it slacks the lines and reduces power, really thats the best outcome if they make a pilot error. Also, this is a good time to teach them when to drop the bar.
A number of people here have taught children. My 9 y/o daughter who is 55 pounds flies 4 and 6 meter kites on the buggy and ATB. For the reasons stated above, I don't even like people to hold her harness, because then the kite will generate more power than she would have if she were flying alone. I would never ever consider a tether.
Jake
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