Hi
Just a very short note to mention that Severne's new masts are on their site. The new Red RDM masts are even lighter than the outgoing model and now include a 460 length. This is a good thing in my opinion, giving us the option to rig big freeride sizes on thin masts.
The new Apex Pro race mast is also lighter than the outgoing model and promises to be something special. I have not used one yet but will keep an eye on Karo's quiver and scrounge a ride if she gets one in a new Reflex 8.
Those of you who examine and compare sail weights as I do, will have noticed that the new TURBO_GT weights have been missing (for a long time now!) from the 2017 specs.
Here are the new TURBO weights for those of you who may be interested and have been frustrated by the TBA entries in the weight column :
2017 Turbo-GT Weights
Size Kg
5.5 3.5
6.0 3.6
6.5 3.8
7.0 4.4
7.5 4.7
8.1 4.8
8.6 5.0
9.2 5.2
That is all for now - talk to you soon
Friday, January 27, 2017
Thursday, January 12, 2017
A Suggested Short List of Rough Water, High Speed Boards
Hi
Before
I get into the topic I must mention that this blog has been numbered in the top
10 windsurfing blogs by a crowd called blogfeedspot.
This is not all that significant to me and is probably less so to
you. I’m not sure of the metrics used to
evaluate the blogs selected.
All that
aside, I notice some really good sites on their list. Please have a look at them on the following
link:
You
will note that some of the blogs are fully on Facebook and Twitter (unlike this
one) and all of them have valuable windsurfing related content of one form or
another. Enjoy!
Anyway
– to the topic of the day:
If your
sailing conditions are anything like ours you will experience some days where
slalom sailing is appropriate and great fun.
You will also have many days where bump & jump kit is far more
suitable due to choppy water and strong winds.
With
this in mind, I have been thinking about a short list of non-slalom boards on
the market right now which are fast, fun and controllable.
I have chosen
two sizes of board – a 70ish wide range and a 65ish wide range. I further split these sizes into free-race
models and free-ride shapes.
Here
are the boards I would include in any short list for this type of board.
First,
the pure B&J schedules:
The Fox
and Blast boards have been discussed on these pages many times. I have never ridden an AtomiQ but the styling
of the thing convinces me that it is pretty special.
The RRD
FreestyleWave (V3 – not the latest one) has always been on my radar and pushed,
I would probably pick this board from the line-up. The latest FSW v4 does not appeal. They have shortened it and it seems far wavier
to me. Give me the old one any
day. Incidentally Tabou have done
exactly the same thing with the latest 3S line.
The Exocet
Cross must be one of the best rough water boards in existence. Their designs have some weird kind of magic
in them so if you ever have a chance to try one, jump at it. You may never buy from another windsurfing brand again. You have been warned.
Here is
the second schedule. This is for speed
merchants who need some comfort and control:
You
will note that the Fox falls into both B&J and Free-race categories. I have ridden Joos’s Fox twice now, the
second time in perfect conditions. This
board is unlike anything I have ridden before (fantastic directional stability,
eye watering speed, comfort over chop and a complete star through gybes). It fits comfortably into both camps – you
would only need to change fins.
The Fox
is possibly a bit too business-like for me.
I need something slightly more laid back and a little more old school. Having said that - offer me a Fox for a good
price and I’ll bite your hand off.
Look at
the insane weights on the Futuras. I
also like the large width of the smaller Futura - 97 Litres and 67cm wide! This indicates that it is a flat board and
therefore endowed with good control. Nice!
Given
the above options, my ideal board quiver would be:
· iSonic
117
· One of
the 65ish boards above. Can’t decide
which!
· A Fanatic
Freewave 96l/61cm wide (Textreme from 2015)
The
last board I like because it would give me the opportunity to use 3 fins in the
swells to play but also to close the side-slots, fit a fast fin into the
power-box, and blast in strong winds. It
has a centre back strap but also screw holes for four outboard straps for blasting. Very nice!
That’s
all for now. I may give you my idea of my ideal sail quiver to go with the above boards. I don’t want to bore you however so I need to
consider whether or not to do this.
All the
best
Thursday, January 5, 2017
New Equipment Cost Discussion and Local Racing Update
Hi
I will provide a link at the end of this post on which you can see some of the local racing but first some commentary following upon Joe Windsurfer’s comments about the high cost of some of the new windsurfing stuff.
Foiling
I have to say that I agree with Joe on this issue - price a new windsurfing foil plus foiling board and feel your eyes water. You have an added problem with new technologies in that they are rapidly evolving so you may spend a whole lot of money only to find that what you have bought has been replaced with something way better! Your money has gone and you can’t sell your redundant stuff - a horrible situation in these difficult times.
The other thing which makes new stuff seem so costly is that we tend to compare it with stuff we already have (the old formula board + fin + two big rigs). The initial cost of all of these things happened long ago and has been forgotten. Your decision is – do I simply continue to use my old stuff in light winds (cost = Zero), or do I invest in some new thing which I may not be able to do, may not like and which is going to require me to mortgage the house and sell wife and kids into slavery. May as well stick with what I have!
Of course if you compare buying a new foiling rig with buying a complete new formula set-up, the costs are far more comparable. Furthermore, as a light wind solution, a foiling set-up is so much more practical. The board and foil are smaller than a 1m wide board plus huge masts, booms and sails. You could use two Severne Converts with your foil (maybe a 6.0m and a 6.7m) and these two sails can also be used with your Freewave board to play in the swells.
Moulded Sails
The next costly technology is the moulding of sails. Here I wonder if there are not far more cost effective options for our sport. The reason for the high costs of North’s technology is the scale to which they have had to cater. Open ocean yachting sails are massive and so is the cost of moulding them. Windsurf sails by comparison are tiny so here are some facts to consider:
- Moulding technology is ubiquitous and very well understood across many industries.
- We know how to make forms and we know how to mould a substrate over a form.
- North have developed the high tech tapes which form their sail bodies. They are super-secretive about them. There are however, countless clever materials guys who could formulate comparable (and maybe even superior) tapes to use in our moulded sails.
- Tapes can be hand applied on something as small as a windsurfing sail - no need for expensive, computerized tape heads.
- Modern scanners can be used to scan any windsurfing sail in 3D. Forming software is capable of converting the scan into a moulding template ready to be milled.
- Milling machines are common
All of the above points suggest that the making of moulded windsurf sails could in theory, be done locally in small, diversified facilities at far lower cost than we are currently faced with from the big lofts.
We are not even discussing 3D printing yet and this technology could present even more options. The big thing is that all of the dimensions for any design can be stored digitally which means they can be transmitted to any part of the world in seconds.
I’m not claiming that this approach is without problems (how do you retain talented designers if every good sail they design is going to be copied in hundreds of moulding facilities around the world, undermining the companies employing those designers?). I don’t know.
Inflatable Boards
The final thing is inflatable, high performance boards. Once again the technologies to build these things are well known. Hundreds of factories around the world make all sorts of inflatable and semi-inflatable craft. I suppose that the main things are to get:
Once you have nailed these aspects, surely any maker of inflatable and semi-inflatable craft could knock out any number of boards – no Cobra factory required!
Our Racing
Our winds have howled and the leading racers have shown unbelievable skill. Danny and Craig from Fanatic have demonstrated exactly how good the 2018 Fanatic/North kit is going to be.
I noticed Ruben Petrisie from World of Windsurf digital magazine on the beach and see that he has a whole section on their site about our racing. He has included some nice vids and the results after each day.
Here is the link to his site:
http://www.worldofwindsurf.com/
We have some of the contestants staying with us including Julien Maurel (scary good Mauritian windsurfer) and Jean de Falbaire (scary fast Mauritian kite foiler). Julien was riding an RRD prototype at Saldanha (see day 2 video) and was absolutely cooking. In one of the heats he was way ahead of the stellar field but slipped on the deck (proto’s have weak anti-slip as you can imagine) at his gybe and fell in.
Karo is holding her own in the storm conditions and her husband Charl is taking names on fast free-ride kit.
Old readers will remember Hennie (local speed sailor) and may be wondering why he is so far down the rankings. He chose not to windsurf this year and has been using the racing to test and tune his foil kite.
OK that is all for now
Good winds
I’m not claiming that this approach is without problems (how do you retain talented designers if every good sail they design is going to be copied in hundreds of moulding facilities around the world, undermining the companies employing those designers?). I don’t know.
Inflatable Boards
The final thing is inflatable, high performance boards. Once again the technologies to build these things are well known. Hundreds of factories around the world make all sorts of inflatable and semi-inflatable craft. I suppose that the main things are to get:
- the required bottom shape created accurately in carbon
- the required rigidity around mast track, fin box and footstrap areas
- weight reduced and strength increased to levels acceptable to finicky windsurfers
Once you have nailed these aspects, surely any maker of inflatable and semi-inflatable craft could knock out any number of boards – no Cobra factory required!
Our Racing
Our winds have howled and the leading racers have shown unbelievable skill. Danny and Craig from Fanatic have demonstrated exactly how good the 2018 Fanatic/North kit is going to be.
I noticed Ruben Petrisie from World of Windsurf digital magazine on the beach and see that he has a whole section on their site about our racing. He has included some nice vids and the results after each day.
Here is the link to his site:
http://www.worldofwindsurf.com/
We have some of the contestants staying with us including Julien Maurel (scary good Mauritian windsurfer) and Jean de Falbaire (scary fast Mauritian kite foiler). Julien was riding an RRD prototype at Saldanha (see day 2 video) and was absolutely cooking. In one of the heats he was way ahead of the stellar field but slipped on the deck (proto’s have weak anti-slip as you can imagine) at his gybe and fell in.
Karo is holding her own in the storm conditions and her husband Charl is taking names on fast free-ride kit.
Old readers will remember Hennie (local speed sailor) and may be wondering why he is so far down the rankings. He chose not to windsurf this year and has been using the racing to test and tune his foil kite.
OK that is all for now
Good winds
Monday, January 2, 2017
Local Racing and some New Equipment
Hi
OK, I think that Ellie and I will make our way down to the beach to watch the racing. The skipper’s meeting was scheduled for 09:00 but knowing windsurfers as I do I am willing to bet that nothing will happen until mid-day. We may rig some freeride kit, have a short blast and maybe sail alongside the racers to get an idea of their speed.
Talk to you soon
I know I said that I would be
discussing the costs of some of the new technologies but this needs some quiet
thought and there is too much going on right now. We have racing on our lagoon and some high
powered internationals have turned up.
The racing is to begin today and
our winds promise to be ballistic. Not
so good for the free-sailors and to be frank, not so good for the racers
either. Anyway we will see how the top
guys handle the wildness.
Joos finally got his hands on a
Severne Fox 105 board which he is considering buying. I clipped my North E-Type 6.6 onto the board
and took it for a spin in light, squirrelly wind/ demon chop. I planed all the way out and all the way back
but was scratching at times. Not ideal
conditions then, but what a machine! When
powered up the board is absolutely composed regardless of chop levels. Good speed is reached quickly and easily. The front of the board cuts through the chop
and the back seems to dissipate any remaining bumpiness giving a totally
settled ride. Gybing is super easy as I
suspected it would be. The standard Fox fin is great. I would invest in one or two smaller sizes for
overpowered sailing but as your main fin, the G10 36cm blade supplied is
excellent and bound to become a close friend in time.
Joos asked my opinion as to
whether he should buy the Fox. Yes, yes,
yes! I would buy this board in a
heart-beat. It seems to have been made
specifically with our local conditions in mind.
Even with my weight being more than that of Joos, I would still opt for
the 65cm wide size.
If I were ever to buy a Fox 105,
my ideal medium wind board would then be an iSonic 117 (light version of
course) and between these two boards I could cover most of my sailing (with a
few sails and fins of course). For the
time being I would hold onto our T-Rex and Bic FW 1.3 for the really light
stuff but keep a keen eye on all the
latest developments in foiling which I am convinced will become the light wind
solution of choice for all of us.
Raffi from Surf n Curve (Severne agent) is here
for the racing and brought the new Severne Reflex-8 sails and an exciting new
range of Severne racing masts. These are
the Apex Pro line and promise to be something very special. They are SDM at the base with a slim, whippy top
section. This is not a new concept of
course but Severne seems to have taken it to new levels. The slim top softens the sail but has super
quick recovery rates so you have some softness without losing any
stability. Please look out for these
sticks if you are serious about slalom racing in 2017.
Erik Beale was out on the water
yesterday hitting speeds of 38k on slalom equipment. He had a really interesting slalom fin
proto-type on the slalom board. I will
not describe the shape to you in case it is secret but this is not a slow
fin! When he was done on the slalom stuff, Erik took out his speed board (Patrik on Gasoil fin) for some “proper speed”. I don’t think I have ever seen anyone going
as fast across our launching beach before.
Civilians were frightened!
OK, I think that Ellie and I will make our way down to the beach to watch the racing. The skipper’s meeting was scheduled for 09:00 but knowing windsurfers as I do I am willing to bet that nothing will happen until mid-day. We may rig some freeride kit, have a short blast and maybe sail alongside the racers to get an idea of their speed.
Talk to you soon
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)