Your audio commentary is invaluable because you explain what I cannot see e.g pressure going onto the balls of your feet, the front hand grip changing to an underhand grip, the slight shift of the back foot forward prior to the turn to maintain front foot pressure …and so much more. Then your slowmo video makes so much sense. Thanks so much for sharing your technique
I like the beginning where you say that for a beginner it is difficult to jibe ! So many videos profess the contrary and then breed a sense of inferiority. Moreover your tuto is very professional, with no ridiculing or pretentious humour as seen too often elsewhere. Some tips are very helpful like the backfoot adjustment at the turn entry and the pivoting of the wing to help reach the rear handle more easily. I also like how you differentiate the light wind case from a medium one. For beginners, please prepare videos on foot switching tips and riding upwind toe side without ending headwind ! Cheers
Thanks for the feedback. I will be doing a foot switch video but I want to do it barefoot - so it is much easier to see the movements. It will 2-3 months before the water gets warm enough for me to do that.
@felixgess6495 as rider weight increases the area of the foil you need to fly increases. In terms of technique it's no different. The only disadvantage for heavier riders is as foils get larger they become less user friendly in turns as foil span affects turning ability.
Thank you very much for these very helpful videos. How about a Tutorial about the technique of pumping the board und the wing to takeoff in lightwind? 😊 Greetings from Switzerland
I have thought about this but the technique does vary quite a bit depending on the wing, foil and board used, so it's not that easy to cover it, I need to think about it a bit and see if I can add anything useful to the process.
Good stuff. Just a bit of feedback when you insert the text with quick tips it is positioned where the video progression bar is so if I pause to read the text it is covered by the bar.
I'm not sure what device you are watching on but video progression bars should be hidden if you are not interacting with the video (ie the mouse pointer is off the screen) or you aren't touching your screen.
@@Wing-Tips It may just be my laptop as I've come across it before. If I pause it to read the text the bar stays on the screen covering the text. Not a biggie, carry on with your good work.
@@66crayfish video ui will appear if you press pause - didn't realise you were pressing pause to read stuff. Perhaps I should leave it on screen longer so you don't have to do that.
it's on my list, we are winter time in the UK now, so finding nice days to film is getting much more difficult. Right now we are being hit with 50kt storms, which don't deliver the kind of sea states we need for useful tuition, so content creation is going to slow down a bit until we get some more tuition friendly sea and winds.
I have some difficulty with switching my hand from palm down to palm up. On lighter wind days this isn't as much of a problem, but when the wind is blasting, I feel I can't really let go of the wing to switch my hand, or risk having the wing blown out of my hands by the sheer strenght of the wind. Is this absolutely necessary? Or can I also rotate the wing without rotating my front hand?
you can rotate the wing without changing the front hand grip but it is both awkward and less effective. To change your front grip you have multiple options - one is to use a harness and hook into the harness to make the change. You can also turn downwind so the wing goes light and off the power and then swap your front hand. You can also let go of the back hand and move it up next to your front hand, swap your grip and then move your hand back to the rear handle.
Nice tips! Great slow motion. One question, can you give some advice concerning switching palm down to to palm up? Can this be done in one movement without losing contact of the wing?
Great tips. Intuitively, I've been sailing with my right hand palm up and left hand palm down. To avoid palm switching before jibes, I'm now sailing with both hands palm up 100% of the time. What is the downside of it?
probably going to make jibes like a heineken or tacks a little more difficult - although it would help with a race jibe - also if you catch a wing tip it's more difficult to recover as the recovery is to punch downwards with the back hand where as palm up you kind of have to pull downwards - which is going to be much less intuitive.
@@Wing-Tips Yeah, I can see your points. Fortunately, I live in a higher wind area; my everyday wing is a 3.5m and my quiver ranges from 2.5m to 5.m. With smaller wings, the chances of wing tip catching water is low. Also, at 71, I'm just happy mowing the lawn all day long. Johnny Heineken jibes or tacks are not in my mind. 😊
@@robtangent4664 if you are just mowing the lawn and doing ordinary jibes then I don't see any downside other than it can be less fatiguing to switch grip on longer sessions - just to change the muscle groups being used..
When gybing, how large of an arc should we be going through? I am able to turn through a gybe and then completely stall out on the other side, so I think my arc may be too tight. I think my friends are turning a larger 1/2 circle than I am. It is hard to know what you are doing when sailing.
you can gybe a large or small arc, assuming your foil has some glide to it and isn;t a very low aspect foil that slows down very quickly when you depower the wing. Most issues with stalling out are due to not getting the foil angle correct during and after the wing transition (ie. flying the foil up towards the surface and losing speed and then stalling as a result). My toe-side tutorial talks about ways to combat this problem.
@@Cloud2cloud-ub4rj when you enter a jibe you are left arm and left foot forward (for example) and on exit you will be right arm forward, left foot forward.
Your audio commentary is invaluable because you explain what I cannot see e.g pressure going onto the balls of your feet, the front hand grip changing to an underhand grip, the slight shift of the back foot forward prior to the turn to maintain front foot pressure …and so much more. Then your slowmo video makes so much sense. Thanks so much for sharing your technique
thanks, if it gets just one more person over the hurdle of jibing then it was worth making 😃
Very good. Clear, slow and detailed
Glad it was helpful!
The slow-mo is so meditating. Great tutorial, cannot await to be on the water again!
..best tutorial out there!! THXXxx
thanks - glad you like it.
Axis BSC 970 has an area of 1500. Ultrashort fuse is 620 long. Most recommend longer fuses, say 700. "Fert" is estuary for foot. :)
I like the beginning where you say that for a beginner it is difficult to jibe ! So many videos profess the contrary and then breed a sense of inferiority. Moreover your tuto is very professional, with no ridiculing or pretentious humour as seen too often elsewhere. Some tips are very helpful like the backfoot adjustment at the turn entry and the pivoting of the wing to help reach the rear handle more easily. I also like how you differentiate the light wind case from a medium one. For beginners, please prepare videos on foot switching tips and riding upwind toe side without ending headwind ! Cheers
Thanks for the feedback. I will be doing a foot switch video but I want to do it barefoot - so it is much easier to see the movements. It will 2-3 months before the water gets warm enough for me to do that.
Great video, super helpful tips!
thankyou
This is great....super-helpful! ( I think I'm ready for your foot switch tips now ;-).
Glad you got something from it.
Great .thanks.
How the rider weight influence on the equipment and/or technique?
Foe example a 110 kg rider 😅
Cheers
@felixgess6495 as rider weight increases the area of the foil you need to fly increases. In terms of technique it's no different. The only disadvantage for heavier riders is as foils get larger they become less user friendly in turns as foil span affects turning ability.
Thanks
Great
@@Wing-Tips
Very nice tips and video. Thank you
thanks, I hope it helps you to progress.
Nice clear tutorial 👍
thanks
A big help. I love the detail (that most vids omit)!
glad we could help
Thank you very much for these very helpful videos. How about a Tutorial about the technique of pumping the board und the wing to takeoff in lightwind? 😊 Greetings from Switzerland
I have thought about this but the technique does vary quite a bit depending on the wing, foil and board used, so it's not that easy to cover it, I need to think about it a bit and see if I can add anything useful to the process.
Amazing. The rear foot adjustment is great. I had improved my toe side cruising but no more thant 15 to 20 seconds. i know it's a key skill.
Great to hear!
great tips man, thanks
This is excellent!
thankyou
Good stuff. Just a bit of feedback when you insert the text with quick tips it is positioned where the video progression bar is so if I pause to read the text it is covered by the bar.
I'm not sure what device you are watching on but video progression bars should be hidden if you are not interacting with the video (ie the mouse pointer is off the screen) or you aren't touching your screen.
@@Wing-Tips It may just be my laptop as I've come across it before. If I pause it to read the text the bar stays on the screen covering the text. Not a biggie, carry on with your good work.
@@66crayfish video ui will appear if you press pause - didn't realise you were pressing pause to read stuff. Perhaps I should leave it on screen longer so you don't have to do that.
Fantastic! Now that we've got the jibe worked out how about a video devoted to the foot switch?
it's on my list, we are winter time in the UK now, so finding nice days to film is getting much more difficult. Right now we are being hit with 50kt storms, which don't deliver the kind of sea states we need for useful tuition, so content creation is going to slow down a bit until we get some more tuition friendly sea and winds.
Excellent
Thank you so much 😀
cool videos, much appreciated. What camera mount are you using?
it's a sail video systems shoulder mount
Nice tips
Glad you liked it
I have some difficulty with switching my hand from palm down to palm up. On lighter wind days this isn't as much of a problem, but when the wind is blasting, I feel I can't really let go of the wing to switch my hand, or risk having the wing blown out of my hands by the sheer strenght of the wind.
Is this absolutely necessary? Or can I also rotate the wing without rotating my front hand?
you can rotate the wing without changing the front hand grip but it is both awkward and less effective. To change your front grip you have multiple options - one is to use a harness and hook into the harness to make the change. You can also turn downwind so the wing goes light and off the power and then swap your front hand. You can also let go of the back hand and move it up next to your front hand, swap your grip and then move your hand back to the rear handle.
Very cool mate, 👍🏄🏼♂️
thanks
Nice tips! Great slow motion. One question, can you give some advice concerning switching palm down to to palm up? Can this be done in one movement without losing contact of the wing?
Very good question.. I plan to do a short video on this as there are a couple of ways to do this, so stay tuned for that.
@@Wing-Tips thxx, looking forward 👌
Great!
thanks
Great tips. Intuitively, I've been sailing with my right hand palm up and left hand palm down. To avoid palm switching before jibes, I'm now sailing with both hands palm up 100% of the time. What is the downside of it?
probably going to make jibes like a heineken or tacks a little more difficult - although it would help with a race jibe - also if you catch a wing tip it's more difficult to recover as the recovery is to punch downwards with the back hand where as palm up you kind of have to pull downwards - which is going to be much less intuitive.
@@Wing-Tips Yeah, I can see your points. Fortunately, I live in a higher wind area; my everyday wing is a 3.5m and my quiver ranges from 2.5m to 5.m. With smaller wings, the chances of wing tip catching water is low. Also, at 71, I'm just happy mowing the lawn all day long. Johnny Heineken jibes or tacks are not in my mind. 😊
@@robtangent4664 if you are just mowing the lawn and doing ordinary jibes then I don't see any downside other than it can be less fatiguing to switch grip on longer sessions - just to change the muscle groups being used..
When gybing, how large of an arc should we be going through? I am able to turn through a gybe and then completely stall out on the other side, so I think my arc may be too tight. I think my friends are turning a larger 1/2 circle than I am. It is hard to know what you are doing when sailing.
you can gybe a large or small arc, assuming your foil has some glide to it and isn;t a very low aspect foil that slows down very quickly when you depower the wing. Most issues with stalling out are due to not getting the foil angle correct during and after the wing transition (ie. flying the foil up towards the surface and losing speed and then stalling as a result). My toe-side tutorial talks about ways to combat this problem.
@@Wing-Tips thanks
when jabbing, are nt we moving with opposite foot?
sorry I don't really understand what you are asking?
@@Wing-Tips opposite foot according to the front arm....left arm right feet or right arm left feet..... Infront
@@Cloud2cloud-ub4rj when you enter a jibe you are left arm and left foot forward (for example) and on exit you will be right arm forward, left foot forward.
@@Wing-Tips and why we do that? what s the reason?
@@Cloud2cloud-ub4rj changing feet on foil is really hard, so it is easier to keep the feet the same and just ride with some body twist.