Wednesday, February 27, 2008

First REAL Synergy 15 Session

Well, today was the day alright. We had a 2 foot south swell at 18 seconds mixed with 4-7 foot NW swell at 15 seconds, and the forecast was for winds to ramp-up into the 20's. It did not disappoint!

I was the first on the water at about 2:00 PM with mid teen winds gusting to high teens. Right away I had plenty of power to get upwind and ride the sets pushing 1.5x overhead. Throwing the kite for the bottom turn and snapping it back is smooth as butter, with the kite obviously resisting luffing and stalling far better than my Venom 16. Compared to the Venom, this kite is basically just more agile in every respect. Turning and acceleration felt like a full size smaller, and today I definitely noticed the impact of the VPC. Like the Scorpion, power build-up and maintenance through sharp turns is just obviously smoother than with the non-VPC models.

After about 45 minutes the wind came on stronger--now averaging about 20 and gusting to the upper 20's. And, though it was clearly gusty, control wasn't an issue with my long throw bar. This is definitely an ARC kite. With the power fully on now, I reverted to my favorite riding style: big airs and basically stalling the kite and forgetting about it while carving-out deep and sharp turns on the big sets and letting the wave drive my board rather than the wind. The mixed swell popped up some great rights and lefts and with only about 4 other kiters out it was "all you can eat" day. What a blast! BTW, you CAN stall this kite to achieve the above-mentioned riding style, but unless you have a long-throw it will be TOO stally as the kite likes looser lines to generate power from lift. One thing that is noticeably better with the Synergy than the Venom is how quickly it recovers from stall. I was able to carve right/left turns by stalling and re-accelerating the kite in a manner quite similar to my V10. No small feat.

I did many medium sized jumps into the critical part of the wave and was amazed at how quickly I was comfortable, consistent, controlled, and most impressively accurate in picking out exactly where I wanted to land and then sticking it right into carving the wave. Towards the end of my session I got over-powered on a port tack doing about mach 10 and decided "what the hell?" Flicked the kite back the other way full-force against the loaded board, let it accelerate with the bar all the way out, and pulled in tight right as I hit lift-off . . . . OH MY! Talk about airtime? This kite is the real deal. I'm not going to throw out numbers, but that was bar-none the highest, biggest hangtime, and greatest distance jump of my entire kitesurfing career. It's going to be a great spring and summer :-).

Cheers,

Gideon

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Peter Lynn Synergy 15 Session 2/24/08

Yesterday I had my first properly powered session on my new Synergy. The pre-frontal wind was blow from low teens to upper twenties on the outside, but more like 4-25 on the beach in the straight sideshore angle and a 40 foot bluff behind my launch at Santa Maria in Santa Cruz . . . shifting 45 degrees suddenly, dropping out, rotors causing updrafts and major over-flies, your basic launch nightmare.

Somehow got it filled, launched, and to the water. I don't think any kite I've owned in the past would have had a chance, and needless to say I was all alone on the water. Once actually riding and out of the beach wind mess the kite handled the shifty/gusty winds like a champ. 12 to 28 in 2 seconds? Well, even on an Arc that gives you a bit of a yank, but with the long-throw and some edging it was totally doable.

I had a fun 1 hour session mostly focused on trying to work my way directly upwind about a mile to Pleasure Point break and navigating 8 foot wind swell mixed with maybe 3 foot long period. In 20 minutes I covered 3/4 of the distance, but then the wind mellowed and the sky looked extremely weird . . . not trusting the wind near the beach or the weather in general, I stayed away from the (anyway very sloppy) break and used my downwind space to carve some turns and launch some floaters.

So my best session yet, but still just testing the limits of the kite rather than the limits of my riding. So far the kite is winning this race :-). Later this week three days of NPH 15-25kt wind and 10 foot swell is forecast, so maybe I can FINALLY write a proper review of some wave sailing.

BTW, today was one of the craziest scenes I've ever seen on the Santa Cruz beaches. Breakers were pushing 30 feet plus and breaking up to nearly a mile offshore . . . mixed with every period, size, and from S to NW directions to create what looked like a boiling cauldron of an ocean . . . huge surges of whitewater dropped multi-ton redwood sections and big boulders onto East Cliff Drive where it bridges each of the lagoons East and West of my house. One of these is the spot where I launched yesterday. The beach stretches 150 yards from the road to the water--not enough to hold the ocean back. Wow!

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Synergy 15 Second Flight

Yep, the rears were definitely too tight the first time, though it did fly much better once I tied-down my depower/center line to shorten the TE lines.

So, yesterday I went out at Waddell Creek in absolutely nutty conditions: 3XOH sets, winds 10-25 avg 15 with some higher gusts to near 30 and very shifty as it was blowing nearly offshore.

Wary of the conditions--with sand blasting my face on the gusts--I got psyched-out. I put 12 inch leaders on the rears thinking the wind would be much steadier and stronger on the outside (it wasn't). Consequently, I was underpowered for the conditions, but here's the punch-line: even in the strongest gusts I didn't feel over-powered once. At the very very least, I can state with certainty that the Synergy 15 has the depower of my Venom 16, and I suspect it's actually somewhat better.

With the kite shifting left and right on the beach with anger in the shifty gusts, I launched the kite with trepidation certain that I'd be over-powered in the gusts. No such thing. Not only did my overly-long TE leaders provide huge depower, but the kite was EXTREMELY stable. Gusts, shifts, lulls, what-have-you, this kite behaves itself like a champion without touching the bar (DISCLAIMER: Do not try this at home, and especially don't try it without a long-throw setup).

The Synergy obviously just keeps on going and going and going in the depower department, but (assuming I've tested the reasonable range in my first two times out), it takes about 3 feet (my full throw) plus another foot (the extra leader length I attached) to go from full stall to total depower. That's four feet and far more than you'll get with any bar you buy off-the-shelf. So my advice to all you folks that don't use a long-throw--and perhaps even for those that do--is to add maybe 20 or 25cm leaders to the kite's LE attachment points with attachment knots every 5 cm. This will allow you to get that extra top-end on those nuking days even with the standard bar. For those wondering how much depower the Synergy has, the answer is: more than any previous PL kite model I've ever tried.

I only ended up riding for about an hour as I was under-powered for surf that size (READ: you need MUCHO power to jump over those 15 foot faces) and with nobody else on the beach I didn't feel like dropping the kite to leash and re-setting with shorter leaders with the wife expecting me home sooner rather than later ;-). If the wind had been steady at 25kts or a little more, I would have been loving it, but too often it was more like 10-15 and with huge bombs exploding around me I was getting nervous. With the kite so depowered most of the time, the turning response wasn't what it should be either, so I only rode some wave to port tack (upwind). Yep, I was scared to luff the kite and get 10 swimming pools worth of water dumped on my head.

All in all, I think I've put my time in with these two sessions so that the next one will be epic. A couple of more adjustments to my setup and I'll be dialed . . . and a half-way decent steady wind day wouldn't hurt either, but this kite doesn't require it once setup right. One more thing of note--the kite continued to have very low bar-pressure (far less than the Venom) and once I get my ghetto bar dialed I will definitely be experimenting with my pulley bar. Double the bar pressure will be a cake-walk, and the pulley bar can deliver 4 feet of throw no problem, so I'll be able to get the full range at any time in any conditions.

My travels have me just off the red-eye in New York City this morning . . . I'm a 25 year die-hard Pats fan, and there couldn't possibly be a worse place for me to mourn at the moment :-((((((((((.

The next session should be coming up this weekend.

Cheers,

Gideon

Monday, February 4, 2008

First day flying Peter Lynn Synergy 15

Saturday morning I arrived home on the red-eye from Tokyo to a
wonderful sight--a neat little box containing my new Synergy 15 kite
(You da man Traig)! First off, I love the new bag as it is less
"busy", more robust, and made for attaching a snowboard in the
back-country. The bag also lists the exact dimensions of the kite on
its tag and states the flat area as 15.7 Sq. M, so it's probably just
like the V-16 in real surface area when you account for the
rounded/chopped off TE at the spar.

A front was moving in with the wind starting to tickle the buoys and
treetops outside my window, but the rain was holding off still at 1 PM
so--in the spirit of "better keep busy to combat jetlag", I went down
to the beach hoping to at least setup and fly the kite for the first
time.

With some rain droplets starting to hit, I setup very quickly . . .
threw in the spars and attached my existing low-throw bar to the
bridle (basically ignoring the TE "kook proof" bridle stuff by
attaching a larks-head around the whole thing).

The wind was still weak--especially at ground level, and the kite only
looked about 50% filled, but with the new design I thought maybe it
flies with a thinner profile and doesn't need as much. I also noticed
that (unlike with my Venoms) the inflation point didn't collapse once
thus allowing me to spend all my time setting up the lines and none
holding the inflation open during pre-inflation (with the Venoms I
sometimes prop it open with a sandal or twig, but I don't think this
will be necessary anymore). I pulled the tip adjusters fully tight
and the center 50%.

I launched the kite and it was obviously way under-inflated, but held
its shape very well and filled-in while I maintained back-line
tension. I don't think a Venom (and especially a Scorp) would have
made it without at least a bunch of clapping drama and probably a
bowtie.

The first thing I noticed was that the kite was flying way to stally
and I had to overstretch my arms to keep it flying forward. My
clamcleat has lost its grip recently and I hadn't bothered fixing it
as I'm very well in-tune with my V's and local conditions so that all
I really need to do is attach the lines to the right pigtail knots at
the start of my session and let the huge throw account for the rest.
Note to self: get my adjuster working right when trying a new kite model!

Anyway, I pulled-in my depower strap about 10 inches, tied it off, and
the kite flew much better. My first thoughts? The kite flew a lot
like an S-Arc with the speed/bar pressure of the 840 and the power of
the 1510. The bar pressure appeared much less than on the Venom and
WAY less than a Scorpion (in fact so much less that I'm going to
break-out the pulley bar and try it again). The major difference I
noticed was that the stiffer canopy with more cells held the kite's
shape much better in hard turns. Keep in-mind though that the wind
conditions were crap--probably 7-15, avg 10, shifty, and with rain
picking up. Hardly ideal conditions to test a kite and not looking
like enough to actually kitesurf. With my trim all wrong and my
adjuster permanently pulled in (though still IMO a little too stally)
I didn't have enough throw left to get an impression of the kite's
depower at all. What was clear in the stronger gusts was that the
kite can accelerate and turn more quickly than my V-16.

The wind ticked up a little bit and I decided to give it a try on the
water. Conditions were atrocious--chest-high shore pound, wind
directly onshore, and (with all the big surf lately), odd sandbars,
reef, pits, etc, on a beach that's usually quite clean. I fought
through the shore break a few times and managed some rides of a couple
of hundred yards parallel to the beach, but even with the wind average
sneaking up to 14 or 15 mph, the whitewater and currents were too much
for me to get out. The big rip current was just to the side where
there's nothing but huge nasty rocks downwind so I decided (given the
fluky storm winds and incoming front) not to use it as a ride out.
The kite felt very stable and smooth and I could easily downloop to
generate power when I needed it. Too bad I just didn't have much of
any downwind to work with :-(.

By now the rain was pouring and it affected the kite's performance
some, but not too much. I did notice one more S-Arc characteristic
which is probably due to the low AR--the kite has the same proclivity
as S-Arc's did to stall-out deep inside the wind-window in certain
situations and needed a couple of yanks on the depower adjuster (I.E.
LE lines) now and then to get it moving forward again. I suspect this
was due to the rain and that my rears were too tight, but it was
amazing how similar to the "S" this was.

My time was up--I had to head home for dinner--even as the wind was
finally picking up more. I got some beach jumps that felt somewhere
in between the Scorp (quick lift-generation) and Venom (nice float)
and hinted at some great things to come.

On to packing up in the driving rain, I expected to pack a heavy,
soggy, and sand-encrusted kite back into my bag . . . . And all that
without even a proper first session. BIG SURPRISE--this kite must be
made out of teflon! The kite surface is seriously hydrophobic to the
point that a good shake with the spars held together and the water was
gone. I can see how they accomplished this with some fancy new
material and treatment, but what really got me was that no sand stuck
to the kite whatsoever. AWESOME! No more heavy, soggy, sandy kites
to deal with even in a heavy driving rain :-)).

Finally, as I was about to detach my lines, I though I'd take a visual
check of how the VPC compared to the Scorpion. Something very weird
here: when I pulled the TE/LE kite lines to stretch the VPC into
shape, the "V" line stayed loose. I'm going to have to take a much
closer look at the kite this afternoon, but It appears that I was
effectively flying the kite with no help at all from the VPC. Did I
miss something in my setup procedure? I should have read all those
tags I ripped off the bridle with pictures and instructions on them.
Perhaps this accounts for the very low bar pressure and
deep-in-the-window stalliness I experienced?

Very early days for sure. Yesterday (Sunday) the wind was epic, but
too much for a 15M kite and I'm a big Pats fan so I stayed home.
Obviously I should have gone kiting :-(((((((((((((((((. Today I
might get a quick sess in but it's looking super windy again so it
will be back to the V-10. With 2X OH surf and bluebird skies at least
I'll be having lots of fun!

Bottom Line: This kite will take a bit of adjustment for me and my
custom bar, but my gut tells me I'm going to love it once I get some
decent conditions.

Cheers!

Gideon