Good work on the vid Casso.
Seriously solid skill set Jimmy.
Looks like the new perfect toy for little Maka's.
Nice video Casso and James!
Really fun to watch this sport come out of the closet and begin to take hold.
Mmmm, I just bought a kite foil board and I am looking forward to learning to kite foil.
However I'm already wondering which one of my SUPs is going to get a tuttle box fitted to have a go at this?
9'2 JL Stun Gun
8'2 NSP DC
or even possibly
7'10 DC minion/door style
ATM I am thinking the 8'2" NSP DC as it is the lightest and would be easier to throw around but not sure as maybe the Stun Gun would be the easiest one to put the power down when paddling for a wave and get it up and foiling?
I would imagine the mast and foil would help tracking and stability when paddling for a wave, (the 8'2 does yaw a bit more than the SG and of course the 7'10 even more so).
Anyone tried retro fitting a foil to an existing board or have any thoughts on this?
I do weight about 90kegs so it might take a bit to get me off the water and I realise a kite foil may not cut it but there is no harm in trying.
I haven't been so excited to try something like this in a long time , I know the perfect spot for it too given the right conditions , I'm getting one
Great to have foils starting to take off. A friend of mine bought a Go Foil and a couple of Tuttle boxes and finished fitting it on Thursday night. He put it on his 9'6" sup. I went down with him to record the moment on Friday. The conditions were low swell and 20 plus knots of wind. Oh well we need to get it wet.
The board seemed to lift as soon as he got on the wave. He didn't get far and maybe the foot placement was too far forward and he was trying to surf it so it just threw him off. While swimming you need to remember the foil is there and it is hard and sharp. He got banged up a bit here.
The next day he went on boat to try towing. The boat was jet powered and the wind was still 20+ knots. I wasn't there but from his report he was attacked by this thing. When he fell sometimes the board flipped and he landed on the foil. I guess the learning curve is that it is harder than it looks, there is potential to get hurt, conditions need to be good, foot placement is critical and maybe the boat had too much power. When I visited him yesterday he was a bit bruised and his approach is cautious.
Be interested what other people's experience is and any tips on how to get up and foiling for dummies.
Great clip by the way - I enjoyed it as it looked too easy.
Great clip, and great skills shown ... but. I thought the clip made it look like hard work, which is a good thing.
There were lots of runs where he was popping up and down on the foil. There were lots of shots of an interesting position where the tail of the board is on the wave and the board half up on the foil (that looks like a good position to be in momentarily). In most of the pumping scenes he only gets a short way before dropping down and paddling.
Judging by the look of the waves he probably would have been better off just surfing rather than foiling.
I think all this is really good to see. It shows that even when things aren't working perfectly that it's still doable and it shows that things are not necessarily as perfect as shown by the Kai Lenny videos.
Regarding boat learning, on the kiting forum there is talk about using low power boats to learn to foil. People claim to use outboards down to 6hp. You don't need much power to get up on the foil and powerful boats tend to be a bit brutal. This is consistent with our kiting experience where we use very small kites in quite light winds.
The other thing is that when a board is drifting by itself in a light wind swell (15 knots) you can see the board coming up on the foil and gliding momentarily as it gets a push from a bump. You don't need a lot of speed or power to be foiling. This is further supported where you can do a foiling transition at almost stationary speeds. As long as the foil has some forward motion it will stay up.
Great video Casso and well done James , great balance mate making it look all too easy and a really good example of keeping the foil low , if you go too high it cavitates and drops. Great control
Teatree :- The Go Foil has been the most popular and designed for a Sup but pretty hard to get in Aus. Most kite foils will work you just need a lower aspect front wing (slightly fatter) You get a good look at James's front wing at the end of the video , that is what you call low aspect .There are about 6 or 7 Sup foils on the Goldie you just haven't seen them, They are set up with either Cabrinha Double Agent , Slingshot , Liquid Force or Lift foils all available at SurfFX. The Slingshot is the most similar to the Go Foil and comes with 3 mast lengths that really help learning.
The Go Foil set up James is using as a Tuttle box connection , which means it plugs into the board like a future fin but goes almost all the way through the board , this is the strongest connection for retro fitting to an existing Sup but there are other ways. I am using twin USA 10" windsurfer boxes because I can fit Cabrinha , Slingshot , Liquid Force or Lift foils to it plus I can move the mast forwards or backwards to find the balance point. Heaps easier for learning until you get your balance. Plus the added bonus to twin box is you can still use the foil to kite or wake foil behind a boat not just your Sup. The Tuttle box connection limits you to Sup or Windsurf boards only.
All the foils I mentioned above and are Ali and pretty heavy except the Lift and top end Slinghot's they are full carbon , so make sure you allow for that when you pick a Sup you need a bit of extra foam.
the boards are sluggish first few strokes then they just glide , if you are up to your ankles makes it hard to start. The boards aren't tippy with the foil as it acts like a giant center board. So basically you want a short fat Sup with plenty of foam and the wider tail you have the better .Here's a shot of mine .This is my second board a custom 8-0 x 27. Unfortunately I broke my hand on Thursday so no footage for a while , 4 weeks at least.
If you want to look at learning to Foil check out "The Slingshot Foil Academy " it's based around kite foils but gives you a great insight to learning to foil and explains aspect ratios and what set up to use when learning.
Click here to watch it:- www.foil-academy.com/
Is the go foil the only one out their for sup?
I think a lot of brands are developing ones now. The choice should widen a lot in the coming year, with affordable options.
Judging by the Gong protos I could see, SUP/surf foils are nothing like kite foils. The wing is at least 4 times bigger than a kite foil.
What we need is a cheap way to practice in a controlled environment, not everybody has access to boats and a pilot gentle on the throttle.
DJ where did you find that ? Thanks mate that is the answer , how simple is that , Thankyou.....
Colas:- Judging by the Gong protos I could see, SUP/surf foils are nothing like kite foils. The wing is at least 4 times bigger than a kite foil.
Sorry mate that is so very wrong . I have tested plenty of kite foils on my Sup they work fine , yes a lower aspect makes it easier to get lift but once you are up a higher aspect has so much less drag. Bigger is not better it is slower.
looks like a trip to surf fx is on the cards , those universal mounts should go well on my old naish 9,3. I'm hoping the ally foils are a whole lot less expensive than the carbon ones.
Piros, here is one of the Gong prototypes (carbon) compared to a kite foil wing (G10)...
www.gong-galaxy.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=56&t=8663
Hey Kami yeah those are foil love bumps
It happens at the start I rarely get touched now.
Colas that front wing is huge , it's just not needed to be that big it just creates drag. Nice build though and it will be an easy foil to learn on but very slow.
Perfect conditions for foiling at currumbin this morning I reckon
My little home made fin worked a treat.
it will be an easy foil to learn on but very slow.
That's the goal!
And the slower you get, the less dangerous are the inevitable falls.
You can always change wings later. But for, I am eager to enjoy flying on the water, not crash and burning...