
The flying lines come wound onto the handle and you can choose two different lengths for indoor flying - 1m for learning, and 3m for more advanced indoor stuff or outdoors in a light wind. All the 333's are designed to be flown with one hand - which of course opens the door to flying two 333's at the same time.....
Purchased: May 2003
| Width | Height | Depth | Weight | Spars | Sail | Windrange |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| - | - | - | - | Micro carbon | Polyester | 0 to 10mph (indoor or outside). |
| Cost | ||||||
| Direct from Guildworks it's US$50 and around US$24 shipping to the UK. | ||||||
This is a difficult one to catagorise. On the one hand I do like it's design and shape, but on the other I haven't had much luck in actually flying it where I feel I have the kite under control. One of the problems is that when you spin the kite it's easy to forget which point of the handle corresponds to which point on the kite - and therefore end up tangling and crashing it. It really is a different form of flying.
To be honest I don't fly the 333 much (it hasn't been helped by losing the handle and I haven't got round to making myself a replacement) since, so far, it hasn't been a relaxing experience!
Having said that I will be getting the handle sorted out and will see if I can make some more progress with it - maybe on longer lines for outside flying. I think indoor/zero wind flying needs experience of how the kite moves when the wind is helping. At least that is the theory.
© KiteJan 2002-2007