A question regarding twintip sizes, it seems to change a bit over time, what is the new normal for sizes you prefer
You could say a 5,8 and 85kg kiter would now generally have a go too of 140x43
Freestyle/free ride, straps, advanced
you forgot to include mowing the lawn
I'm a little taller and a little less tubby. I ride a 132. 132 is the premium size. Buy one, and if it doesn't work for you just lose some weight. You're slightly above the BMI.
As mentioned above it depends on so many factors. Personal preference, riding style, body weight and wind conditions are the main ones in my opinion.
For example: If you only kite in strong winds i.e. more or less 25 knots then a 140cm board would be a bit big. In those conditions, smaller is better but again it's about personal preference, board shape, etc. If you're looking for more grip at higher speeds in choppy conditions to do big jumps for example, closer to 130cm is better.
Generally speaking the more advanced you are the smaller the board you would use.
If you provide a lot more details you'll get much better suggestions
Christian
Hi
Thanks for the reply, OK..
Kites 8 11 14
Straps, no boots
Mainly kite at beaches so choppy onshore, but also kite some flat water
I agree that if the conditions were 25knots every session then sure short is good, however in the real world that won't happen.
So 15 to 35 knots
I would suggest to myself 138x42.5 as a example.
135 would be to small at my specs unless as mentioned you were in 25knots every time
135x42, decent rocker, some flex in the tips, a nice bit of concave also,
Crazyfly raptor pro
Shinn brown crb4
Duotone team series
Xenon infra
Nobile 50
Axis Vanguard,
135x42, decent rocker, some flex in the tips, a nice bit of concave also,
Crazyfly raptor pro
Shinn brown crb4
....
Shinn Brown! Is that one for brown arrows
135x42, decent rocker, some flex in the tips, a nice bit of concave also,
Crazyfly raptor pro
Shinn brown crb4
....
Shinn Brown! Is that one for brown arrows
Plucking auto smell
Surely if you had worked your way up to advance riding level you would know what size board you like to ride and differences it makes to you?
Because you said Go to = allrounder.
The length width and rocker is ok at 140..
Chop is what you should be concerned with - gives me the $hits after a while.
Remember the King of Air guys are in strong winds with big wide boards.
Contrary to our smaller beliefs..
You need more than 1 board.
Then you can select to suit conditions.
You'll progress further faster.
1 board will eventually hold you back and teach you bad habits.
Yep possibly, 135 and 140
But I prefer one board
What I was asking was in general in these modern board days vs the old days
A 5,8 85kg rider now seems to be gravitating to 140x43
This seems big to me but I see a lot on this size now.
135x42, decent rocker, some flex in the tips, a nice bit of concave also,
Crazyfly raptor pro
Shinn brown crb4
....
Shinn Brown! Is that one for brown arrows
Plucking auto smell
King Brown?
You could do worse than extrapolate from the size guide here:
shinnworld.com/board-size-selector
At your weight a 42cm width is about right. I like the Shinn Ronson personally. Other boards are also good
I'm 5'11 87-97 kg, used to ride a 132/42 for years but recently changed to a 138/42 just because I wanted a bit more wind range , but found myself sticking with the 138 more while it gets a bit skatety in the upper wind ranges it really does not make that much of a difference but you don't catch your rails as much and if you feel you going over the front of the board it's probably on the small side.!
Yep possibly, 135 and 140
But I prefer one board
What I was asking was in general in these modern board days vs the old days
A 5,8 85kg rider now seems to be gravitating to 140x43
This seems big to me but I see a lot on this size now.
i tried a few thanks to dans selling skills at Kite Addiction...fitting name... started off (9/12m, 80-90kg 5'11) on 145x45cm learning then went to 132x40cm and stayed around that for a year then went to 132-134x40.5cm or so for next two years (monarch, xcal) , then i ended up going for 138x41.5cm with a bigger rocker (naish dub/stomp) and found that works well in wind over 18kts as the low end suffers unless you have a big kite tugging you along. Its marginal in 15kts with a 12m. But then again depends if you have nice flat water and are unhooking then its prob just ok. Anyways I have now got a carbon board from offgrid sports (138x42cm) - It has a flatter rocker and works better in lower wind but also kept the nice soft landings. So i would definitely say go for a bigger board and try go for carbon as i found it performs way better for airtime style anyways...i reckon you should aim for 134 - max 138cm but try (or buy and trade in, in my case) as many as you can as well :)
Addikt has summarised it fairly well. the bigger board will provide the extra stability as well, just makes everything easier without loosing too much agility
You just need to ride man, and feel the stoke. just grab any old board and tap into its particular vibe and froth away.
I'm advanced as far as storm kiting and mutant waving riding is concerned, I'm rolling 145x45 wave mutant.
But hey, i'm a bit of a weirdo and not your average twin tippist.
You just need to ride man, and feel the stoke. just grab any old board and tap into its particular vibe and froth away.
Absolutely.... Ride more then you will just know.
A good board helps but nothing like old fashion practice.
More boards are going longer and narrower, I wouldn't say there is a certain length you can go for now. At Naish we have a new board coming out that you would definitely upsize on, say you rode a 138 before now you'd ride a 144 (narrower), 142 before you would ride the 152 and the 138 is super narrow and feels like a 132-4 approx - Benefits include smoother ride, more progressive carving, less spray in eyes, more glide on the water, great board in waves too. Will be able to release more details in the coming days :)
More boards are going longer and narrower, I wouldn't say there is a certain length you can go for now. At Naish we have a new board coming out that you would definitely upsize on, say you rode a 138 before now you'd ride a 144 (narrower), 142 before you would ride the 152 and the 138 is super narrow and feels like a 132-4 approx - Benefits include smoother ride, more progressive carving, less spray in eyes, more glide on the water, great board in waves too. Will be able to release more details in the coming days :)
Sounds interesting Ewan! Naish not bringing back the picklefork is it?
More boards are going longer and narrower, I wouldn't say there is a certain length you can go for now. At Naish we have a new board coming out that you would definitely upsize on, say you rode a 138 before now you'd ride a 144 (narrower), 142 before you would ride the 152 and the 138 is super narrow and feels like a 132-4 approx - Benefits include smoother ride, more progressive carving, less spray in eyes, more glide on the water, great board in waves too. Will be able to release more details in the coming days :)
Sounds interesting Ewan! Naish not bringing back the picklefork is it?
the bearded hipsters will make it cool again
lots of numbers and brands being thrown around here, with out the general understanding of dynamics.
1. you can get away with a shorter board if its flatter in the rocker line.
2. width makes more difference than length (in all respects)
3. a softer board, with a lot of flex will need a lot of power.
4. a skilled rider can make anything work
A question regarding twintip sizes, it seems to change a bit over time, what is the new normal for sizes you prefer
You could say a 5,8 and 85kg kiter would now generally have a go too of 140x43
I'm around 83kg, 6'1ft.
My most used size is 155cm.
My size for mainly doing airtricks would be a 150cm.
Boards have been too small for too long, it's why a lot of people hate riding a twin tip.