
This is my copy of Andy Wardley's Airbow - a wonderful new quad line kite that has a number of dual line trick kites flying characteristics (i.e. you can do slack line tricks with it). When I saw the videos released on the Internet in November 2003 I wondered about having a go at building one - partly for the challenge (and oh boy it has really proved to be a challenge!), and partly to see what it was like to fly (I wondered if it was similar to the Deca). In construction it looks like a cross between a Synergy Deca and a couple of Delta kites joined together. The whole sail is tensioned by a central bow spar (to use Deca terms), with vertical standoffs to give the sail an even more 3D shape. And it's the shape that made me call my version (which, lets me honest, is miles from the original in terms of construction and performance) the Airbra because, ahem, it does bear a resemblance to a garment of that name.....
Made: January 2004
| Width | Height | Depth | Weight | Spars | Sail | Windrange |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 230 cm |
83 cm |
33 cm |
250 g |
Revolution EXP (central bow) 4mm Carbon (vertical & stand offs) 8mm Carbon (vertical) |
Ripstop Nylon | medium |
| Cost |
||||||
| Fabric: £8 approx., Spars: £9 (for the 4mm carbon - I already had the Revolution EXP spars). | ||||||
Still undergoing development, but from the test flights it looks like:
It appears that I have only been partially successful with the Airbra - it doesn't do the Airbra tricks i.e. it won't fall on it's front or back, but it is fun to fly and seems to have more than a few unique things it can do.
It flies like nothing else I have tried - more precise than the Deca, more radical than the Revolution. Even if it has 60% performance of a real Airbow I think I will have fun with this one....
© KiteJan 2002-2007