by dave holmgren » Thu Jul 30, 2009 10:02 pm
Hi Chris,
A good friend of mine in Fort Walton Beach loves his '07 19m Caution Answer for a light wind kite. His other kite is a 12m Caution. He weighs about 165 and is a pretty good, relatively experienced rider. He's an Answer fan and is trying to get sponsored by them, so he's more than a little biased. There were two of those 19m kites at the kite beach in FWB so I got to see them in action frequently. Here's what I think about them (for what it's worth). Caution made the leading edge of the kites too thin- in a attempt to increase the efficiency and speed of the kite. Great idea in general, but it didn't work too well on the huge 19m. Best did a bit better with their Cuben fiber stiffened leading edge design. The Answer 19 is a jellyfish, pure and simple, they couldn't stiffen it enough to make the thin leading edge work-even pumped up really hard. Comments made by others here about relaunching it are very true for this kite, once it gets wet, if you don't have close to 15mph wind, it's going to be really tough to relaunch. AND... if you have 15mph - you don't need a kite that big. Mark does really well on it - because he doesn't hardly ever put it down on the water. He is able to ride and stay upwind on it when most others can't, but in minimal winds, my feeling is most of us aren't having all that much fun anyway.
For me- my big kite is an '08 17m Cabrinha Contra 3. It is a truck- VERY high bar pressure and slow to respond/turn, but with a fat leading edge it has enough stiffness to relaunch as well as most kites do in light wind- which is to say- not real well. I've got mixed emotions about the kite after a full year of riding it, probably 50-75 sessions (the winds tend to be pretty light in panhandle Florida in the summer). I weigh about 200-210 (dammit) so I need a bigger kite than most guys, but as I've progressed as a rider, I'm often able to ride a smaller kite (currently my next smaller kite is a 14m LF Havoc), which because I can turn it better (and thus generate more apparent wind) is a LOT more fun than the Contra. Wow, long run on sentence there... On the flip side, I can ride and stay upwind at about 10-11 mph on my Contra and my big plank/Door type board (140x48cm), so for just cruising in lighter winds- it's OK. Generally, I think my next light kite will be a 15-16m, and like another poster said, use a bigger board or a directional/surf board with some float for real light days.
Bottom line- From what I've seen and tried, the Contra 17m is the best of the light wind kites (downside- like many Cabrinhas- if you let it overfly and Hindenburg, it tends to invert more than some other large kites I've seen). The 19m Answer - IF you get it really cheap, AND you pump it up really hard, AND you don't drop it in the water- might be OK, but other than keeping you from getting skunked completely, it might not be something you end up enjoying very much. BTW- how much do you weigh, Chris? If less than 180 or so, I'd probably avoid it regardless.
But, hey- that's my two cents, take it for what it's worth, and good luck!
-Dave
Last edited by
dave holmgren on Mon Sep 07, 2009 9:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.