JonahL forum posts in last 60 days

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JonahL
JonahL
103 posts
103 posts
18 May 2026 4:16am
I used a 90 the other day and didn't notice a big difference getting on foil. Turning is worse/slower and glide is compromised a bit until you get used to flying high. You need a little more stab (shim or bigger stab) with a taller mast so that will also reduce speed & glide a bit. Not enough to be an issue if you are bump riding short runs but a little compromise for long downwinders or marginal conditions. I prefer 80
JonahL
JonahL
103 posts
103 posts
1 May 2026 3:02am
Piros said..
My second session was inshore but it was cranking wind against full flood run out tide , didn't wear a leggie to reduce tangle risk and as I normally only ride really small foils so they don't travel much BUT I had on a monster Axis foil . First fall the board took off downwind self pumping and I was get sucked the opposite direction with the tide. If it wasn't for 20 years of waterpolo under my belt that board was gone, I had to ditch the Para and swim like hell . Got to the board and paddled to the Para before it sunk . Hopped on the board and reset , did exactly the same thing again next attempt Needless to say came in and put on a brand new coiled leggie which got immediately caught in the lines Got to love the Para. I've overcome this now by using and older coiled leggie which is a bit stretched and the lines don't hook on it , works perfect.


A reversed hybrid leash works well, coil by the board and dyneema at the calf
JonahL
JonahL
103 posts
103 posts
5 Apr 2026 11:39am
Stumbleweed said..

JonahL said..


Stumbleweed said..
It gets pitchy/divy




Have you tried a longer fuse/bigger stab or shimming for more front foot?



I'm on a 60 cm fuse. Haven't gone longer. Have used shims and various stabs. Maybe not as scientifically as I could though.


Maybe try shimming or a bigger stab until you have solid front foot pressure, it will be draggier but you should be able to push harder
JonahL
JonahL
103 posts
103 posts
5 Apr 2026 4:45am
Stumbleweed said..
It gets pitchy/divy


Have you tried a longer fuse/bigger stab or shimming for more front foot?
JonahL
JonahL
103 posts
103 posts
5 Apr 2026 1:36am
Stumbleweed said..
Badass wingfoil racers look like they never change their sail angles. How do they absorb the power when a gust hits? Certainly part of it is being willing to go faster -something I'm loathe to do over 17 or so kts.

I know I 'need' to learn to be stable on foil at higher speeds. But I intuit that a component of this is having more stillness in the upper body causing less instability translated to the foil. I'm constantly adjusting the sail angles to account for wind strength. So what's the secret -just lean back and let the whole gust get translated into velocity?


Basically you are on the right track, what sort of foil instability are you feeling as you approach 20 knots? Pitchy/diving? overpowered front foot pressure? Both of those will make you back off, so gear can come into it. gear wise a well tuned foil that remains stable and doesn't overpower the front foot is important as is a stiff wing that provides enough support to lean against. I feel like 4.0 to 5.5 is the sweet spot for that type of riding on non-race gear, smaller wings get twitchy and bigger tend to catch the wingtips. You want the wing as upright and sheeted in as possible.
JonahL
JonahL
103 posts
103 posts
26 Mar 2026 2:32am
get the free version of Shape3D and re-create your board in it. A rough approximation based on length/width/thickness will get you close on volume even if you don't make the exact shape. There are lots of foilboards you can download as a starting point. The difference in dimensions between a 60L and 80L board is not subtle
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Or... let us know if a problem, so we can tweak! 😅