
I picked this up secondhand at the same time as the Gemini, and although the Minigem too has seen life, the sail is in much better condition. Placing the Gemini and the Minigem side by side does show the size difference. Strangely for a kite for use in higher wind speeds the frame is lighter - 5.5mm carbon as opposed to 6mm in the Gemini.
Purchased: September 2005
| Width | Height | Depth | Weight | Spars | Sail | Windrange |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 186 cm | 96 cm | - | - | 5.5/6mm carbon | Polyester | high |
| Cost | ||||||
| Second hand - new around £140 | ||||||
The Minigem is nice - when the wind start blowing upwards of 15mph then it's ideal to try the Minigem. It does everything that the Gemini does (or at least to the best of my ability) - just in higher wind speeds. Of course when the wind really starts blowing then it flies extremely fast. Good reflexes needed!
I doubt that the Minigem makes a good choice by itself - it's more of a compliment to other kites. If I suspect that the wind speed will be high I make sure I take the Minigem along to a flying session - swapping between this and the Custom Vented Revolution 1.5 SLE makes for a nice flying session.
When I first got it I had problems with the leading edge ferrules breaking in flight. However now I have replaced both ferrules I havent had any further problems. Of course ferrules are always going to be weak points on the leading edge, but if you want a kite that folds up small then it's just something to live with.
© KiteJan 2002-2007