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  1. Wayne Dowler

    Wayne Dowler

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    West Australian

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    SHBKF

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Popular Content

Showing content with the highest reputation on 05/16/2017 in all areas

  1. This is about an Indoor Glider, Outdoors... I found myself on the field in zero wind, I am not much of a zero wind flyer with anything other than Gliders. I decided to try the iFlite Vented outdoors. I got out my little spool of about 5m of fine line and cast out about 3m of it. I got a great fly playing with the open space, no walls, light fittings, furniture. It was awesome to have the space around me to try something new. After a short while the Breeze picked up and I packed the iFlite away and went back on the Rev SUL. The following day I was once again on the field in Zero wind. This time I pulled out the roll of line I had cut the 5m from. I stared playing with the iFlite on longer and longer line. Getting out to 25-30m It was eating up the line and supporting it well on the glides. Then Suddenly I noticed a bit of tension in the line, a Breeze... Not a wind, but a light breeze. Less than 1mph. I let the iFlite float out in the breeze and pull more line with it. With some footwork and careful feeding of the line I got the little iFlite out on the full 110m. I staked the end down and stood back, Ok, where did my kite go? It was a cloudy day and I have a white iFlite.... The line I use is very thin 0.08mm (0.00315"). The line was not visible more than 10m away. After some solid searching the kite could be found, but it was not easy. It was surprisingly stable, it sat fairly still and maintained a slight tension on the line. I am not sure how much breeze was up where it was, but there was nothing on the ground. After a while someone started flying a R/C drone under the iFlite, so I decided to bring it in. The Outdoor/Long line is a new aspect of the iFlite that I really enjoyed. Thanks for reading my little story, comments appreciated. WA
    1 point
  2. Referring to the comment upthread about multiple spools and the line becoming too heavy. Many years ago I flew my red delta from the top of a well known "pointy hill" (not really a mountain) called Thorpe Cloud (Dovedale, Derbyshire, UK) and I daisy chained a series of spools and lines. The kite went very high indeed, and a long way down wind, until I reached the stage where the line was angling down from my hand into the valley, then back up to the kite from the next spool.
    1 point
  3. Did a bunch of handles using that "Watty" mod and they are still going strong!! Easy, peasy to do - with practice you can do a set in less than 30 minutes! BUT - be really careful - there is a nasty burr left from drilling the holes for the hog ring!! Rev doesn't clean it up in their manufacturing process. IT WILL LAY YOU OPEN!! Been there, done that! Tools needed: Strong pliers or needle nose, screwdriver. Just be sure not to scar up or ruin the vinyl cap as you remove the ring, unless you plan to replace them. I didn't need to, just ran my leaders out one of the existing holes after turning them front to back instead of side to side, So there was a hole in the back - no biggie! #8-10 wallboard anchors fit perfectly in the tube and cover any raw edges (flange on anchor overlaps), only thing needed is to do one of 2 things - #1- if you use the threaded screws that come in the pack, I recommend chucking them in a drill and filing down those last few threads. That way they won't eat into your leader. Choice #2 - buy some SS shoulder screws when you get the anchors. eliminates the need to file threads down. Like I said - did a bunch this way to save a bunch of cash ....................... spent on more kites!
    1 point
  4. My furthest out flight in the last year was a Wala on 500 feet of line. It looked very small & very high reminding me of flying kites as a youngster out West. I would put up my small delta on two or three spools of line, sometimes losing sight of the kite until the wind would shift the kite so I could spot it again. The line would get heavy enough that you did not have to tie it off. The weight was enough to hold it for you. The kite would not go higher after too much line. It would just be further away. Thanks for stirring my memory of those early days. It was my first plastic kite & my first delta called "The Eye in the Sky". I got it as a premium for signing up new paper subscribers. I was a bicycle paper boy delivering the Deseret News in Brigham City, Utah. Made about fifty bucks a month delivering sixty papers each day. It was good money for a kid back in the sixties & a little more than my brother made each month as a private in the Army at that time.
    1 point
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