Kitepower Australia said...archie00 said...
Come down to the race this Saturday on Botany Bay. Should be light wind and you will have a better set up than most.
IKA - seems like it is all about trying to control the sport, before we really have a sport to control = recipe to kill sport. IKA imposes approx $4000USD to register a kite or a board!!!
I'll have a go at answering this one....Yes they are trying to put some boundaries on the sport ,I use to sail moth skiffs ,these are a development class there are 3 rules pretty much the boat can be so long ,so wide and x amount of sail area.....no min weight anything else goes......if you got 1 or 2 seasons out of a brand new boat and keep it in one piece whilst staying competitive you were doing well. The boats were getting redicullasly light ,the hulls were getting narrower to the point that they were 20-30 cm wide , nowadays they all run hydrofoils , the expenses of keeping up with hull and rig developments was stupid and when it came to sell your 2 year old boat they were worth nothing ,they were no longer as competitive as the top guys so very hard to sell.yes there is a place for this type of class to push the boundaries and those who sail them love em .
Other classes I sailed 505's were stricter in their rules the boats are competitive for many ,many years ( with new sails ect) and when it's time to upgrade they are still with some decent coin.
Got to ask yourself would you rather a kiteboard that lasted 3-4 years and was still competitive because of the stricter rules built to a min weight ect ,even if you sold it after a couple of years you would get something for it ,,,or a board which is super expensive to buy , super lightweight , probably buggered after 1 year of hard racing , no one will buy it cos it's possible stuffed or in the 12 months of development in the scene since you got it something beter has come out?
My point is that if you have a development class say for kite racing ( I'm not saying there is not room for an open class for those with heaps of cash who want to push the boundaries) the gear will be virtually outdated by the time that average Joe gets a chance to buy it from the kite shop. With the box rule there are strict limits on board sizes , fin lengths , board weights , kite max sizes , number of kite you can use in a regatta.if it were open development class guys would be running hydrofoils , custom build race kites that might only last a dozen races then they would be stuffed , boards which are built super light and again stuffed in half a season, all this to stay on top .
Your talking $4000 to reg a board or kite through the ika , that's a little steep but I think the rule about the amount of productions kites / boards (50 i think) which have to be produced is fair this gets people on production boards which are very similar brand to brand and it gets people off the super lightweight ,super expensive custom boards.you want to be able to go into a kite shop and buy the kite and the board that the current world champion is using ,I don't think this will be at all out of the question with the box rule.
Saying this course racing in Australia if fairly new and not as popular .to attract intrest in the sport and Not make it too elite for others I think it would be an idea to have several classes. 1 would be the guys who want to race under the ika rules ( international box rule ) call it production class .
the 2 nd class would be everything else custom boards, surfboards , twin tips ,hydrofoils ect.the 2 nd class would not have all the rules and restrictions as the production class but would offer some good fun racing for those involved.
Jay