Thanks very much. This one especially took a lot of work. I did a ton of research before even starting, trying to get enough statistics to provide a basis for the advice; and then I re-wrote/editted a few times to get the information succinct. Thanks again, Alex.
@@kitesurfcollege I have been meaning to pay you for your effort. Just sent 50 euros trough paypal. Hopefully more in the future as you have been really a great help in my journey, and have saved me 10x that much in potential damage. But I just also spend over 800 on action cam stuff and smart watch to track my session so I am a bit careful with money.
@@kitesurfcollege Once again thank you. I just sent you 50,- trough paypal. I truly appreciate your work. And I think you have made the lives of many people better.
I gave up hooked harnesses years ago after coming unhooked as a newbie several time in one session while in La Ventana. I switched to a rope slider after that since I couldn't see any reason why I'd want to get unhooked from the kite (wasn't interested, and too old, for tricks). Now that I'm mostly foiling, the rope slider is almost everyones go-to. I've had a couple situations where lines get tangled after a crash, but mostly it's been when the foil goes through the lines and the kite loops from there. I'm usually way out in the water getting dragged around, but counter steering till I can figure out the foil issues has done the trick for me. A great video, thanks!
This video might have saved my ass yesterday. My steering line got super slack while I was trying to relaunch and it got wrapped around the bar which would've put me in a death loop situation had the kite actually relaunched at that moment. After feeling the slackness I thought to myself "is this my 10 second window before a death loop?" and checked my bar and found the line wrapped. I quickly unwrapped it and it was all good. Normally I might not have paid attention to this and just focused on getting the kite back up.
Thx I had not considered the counter steer option. Appreciate seeding ideas before they become an issue. I had a death loop last month on 9m XR7. I overflew a jump and the kite tumbled and inverted, wind was too strong to flag it back to normal, but no biggie- was in knee deep water, so I popped the Chicken Loop. Unfortunately the inversion turned into partial inversion with a death loop (probably helped by the dual line flag out).- could not resist its power or make any progress to resolving it. After 6-8 loops I had to punch out of the kite and then chase it down- luckily someone else caught my drifting kite, no damage. So yes safety systems worked and could not think of an alternative since I was already on one line with bar out of reach.
Its been a long time!! and yet another gold standard video without a doubt, which can save your life. Thx to your videos, I had 2 death loops only in my early days as a kite surfer (ejecting the CL worked) and feel real safe flying it now, and had none in years. However, Ill give a try by generating it myself in light wind to train how to use the counter steering method to unwrap... better to have it done once when under control than having to figure it out when you approach a wall... (in light winds, with 2 miles free downwind along the beach..) thx a million for your efforts.
Thanks for sharing Dnaiel. I think a light wind counter steer practice is a good idea for someone who is ready and (as you say) has the correct conditions. I have a friend (who is a good kiter) who recently kept self launching and landing in light wind even when there's a group of us at the beach. I asked him why, and he explained he was trying to improve those skills in light wind in case he ever really needed them, which then made a lot of sense.
Another great video - I recommend this channel to anyone I give lessons to. Interesting the clip with self / drift launching - the only times I've experienced death loops have been drift launching where a steering line wrapped around the wingtip. Counter steering sorted a couple, and CR release another time. When the dunes are fast approaching, time to eject!!
Hi Wayne, I mainly use rebels and they have a bridle large enough that the bridle can catch on the wingtip during a drift launch. I know to watch for it now (you can tell if the bridle has caught on the wingtip from the kite's slightly distorted shape) and if it has I usually give a few pumps on the center lines (pulling in and out so the center lines slack and tense a few times) and then the bridle pops off.
Very good and interesting video! Hopefully I never have to use it, but better be prapared :) There is one important tip though that isn't mentioned nor showed correctly. When you pull in a single line (like you see at 3:56) make sure you grab the line with your hand position correctly. In this video clip you see the kiter grabbing the line with the inside of the hand facing upwards. I wouldn't recommend this. For a safer and better grip you always should grab a line the opposite way, so with your hand facing down (thumb towards your body). After you grabbed the line, you can turn your hand a little so your thumb is up 👍 and the inside of your hand is facing towards your body. With doing this, you create a turning point in the line, which will decrease the risk of cutting/hurting your hand with the line.
This should be required at kite schools, when i had my first death loop my biggest mistake was pulling the wrong lines. This explanation could have prevented it.
I've had the bar go under my harness very early on in my kitesurfing journey. And obviously this rendered both safety symptoms ineffective. I accidently jumped, ended up in the lines with the Kite crashed and the kite was powered up in the wind ending up in the bar going under the harness. Extremely scary stuff
Thanks for sharing Alex, that must have been properly scary. So the chicken loop eject failed, and then you ejected the leash? Do you remember what set off the death loop?
The set up was off a drift launch. One bridle lay over the tip. Once the kite caught wind it took a split second for it to start looping and it went on and on. I couldn´t react fast enough and was overwhelmed by the strong pull of the kite. The water was only ankle deep. The wind blew on shore and it was a proper storm. The beach downwind was full of onlookers. I ejected and the kite lost power but the safety didn´t go the full way, maybe a couple of meters. The kite lost a good amount of power and I was able to get a foot hold. Yet it was still looping at around 1 loop in 10 seconds. I couldn´t let go of the kite because of the full beach downwind. So I went towards the beach and dunes step by step. Had to wait for some old geezers to get out of the f**king way when I was about to leave the water, as if they didnt notice me coming closer, step by step. Then the kite looped into a dune and stoped. That was quite a relief. This tore up a wingtip, nothing serious. I was lucky and learned multiple lessons from this incident.
Once I got steering line wrapped after a crash in 10+ m/s and got deathlooped to the beach with trees very fast. Luckily I train all new things quite far from shore (but not too far😎), so I got plenty of time to think about my life and eject chicken loop.
I've heard that after about 10 loops, the line twists from a death-looping kite will likely prevent a kite from flagging out. So I count loops if my kite starts uncontrolled looping, and if I haven't stopped the looping with advanced techniques ( counter steering or manually flagging ), I resort to chicken loop release at 5 loops. Anyone else have experience with twisted lines choking the flag-out ?
Another great video, and I would say a really important one! I still ride the F-one monolith bar, which I believe has the dual line flag out system that keeps death looping after ejecting in the video at 14:53. I have heard people say before the monolith bar shouldn't be used anymore for that reason. I didn't think much of it until I saw the rider in your video with the death loop. What are your thoughts on the topic?
Thanks very much. I had a friend with that bar get into a bad death loop and never wanted to kite again. It is known to lead to death loops when there's a kite inversion or bridle snag etc. I have heard there is a fix for the bar to make it a single line flag out, but it's probably not simple and might be better to upgrade when you can. What condition is the bar in, do the lines have much life left? The main issue with keeping the bar will be you have much higher that the kite will keep flying/looping after the chicken loop eject and therefore there's a higher chance of needing to also eject the leash.
I had 2 situations to report: on a lake with on and off gusty wind, my kite dropped on the water during a 0 wind while, the lines became slacked, the kite galled turning upside down on itself so the lines were not in normal position and the slack lines turned around my board pads. Then the wind picked up suddenly…and the loop started, one line being pulled by my board. so it was unclear what to do. I then released the CL…. Another situation is on a more stable side wind, around 20kts, I realized that my wife, quite beginner, was loosing to much ground from the starting beach. I suggested her to come back to the beach in bodydrag, and I did followed her on this manœuvre. Suddenly she turned her kite to mine, probably asking a question and both kites started to turn together. I immediately released my CL , and asked her to do the same, but kites started to loop with lines possibly turning around her body. I had not other chance to release totally my kite, then ask her to do the same. Both started kite far dancing together, then moving individually. One stopped on the beach and the other one on a dead tree, and was very damaged. I now realize that both bars were old models, without one sliding line but both attached together. This is possibly why first CL release didn’t clearly worked. I will ban this bar for the future.
Hi Nicolas. Thanks for sharing your examples. What bar were you using? The old core and f one bars were common and had the dual-center-line flag out. Also, when your board got caught on your lines, did the CL eject do its job?
@@kitesurfcollege It was RRD old bar . Good quality, long life lines but I didn’t made relation between obsolete design and actual safety issue. The CL eject system always worked fine. I had 2 , for me and my wife and used them with several different kites. I now moved to foil kites, mostly with dedicated bar, and purchased new bars for other kites, but still have them.
Thank you. You are the gold standard on kitesurfing videos. It is clear you put a lot of effort in to your videos.
Thanks very much. This one especially took a lot of work. I did a ton of research before even starting, trying to get enough statistics to provide a basis for the advice; and then I re-wrote/editted a few times to get the information succinct. Thanks again, Alex.
@@kitesurfcollege I have been meaning to pay you for your effort. Just sent 50 euros trough paypal. Hopefully more in the future as you have been really a great help in my journey, and have saved me 10x that much in potential damage. But I just also spend over 800 on action cam stuff and smart watch to track my session so I am a bit careful with money.
@@kitesurfcollege Once again thank you. I just sent you 50,- trough paypal. I truly appreciate your work. And I think you have made the lives of many people better.
@@kitesurfcollege your work is the best out there even for independent riders I watch allot of the videos.. they are well explained
I gave up hooked harnesses years ago after coming unhooked as a newbie several time in one session while in La Ventana. I switched to a rope slider after that since I couldn't see any reason why I'd want to get unhooked from the kite (wasn't interested, and too old, for tricks). Now that I'm mostly foiling, the rope slider is almost everyones go-to. I've had a couple situations where lines get tangled after a crash, but mostly it's been when the foil goes through the lines and the kite loops from there. I'm usually way out in the water getting dragged around, but counter steering till I can figure out the foil issues has done the trick for me. A great video, thanks!
This video might have saved my ass yesterday. My steering line got super slack while I was trying to relaunch and it got wrapped around the bar which would've put me in a death loop situation had the kite actually relaunched at that moment. After feeling the slackness I thought to myself "is this my 10 second window before a death loop?" and checked my bar and found the line wrapped. I quickly unwrapped it and it was all good. Normally I might not have paid attention to this and just focused on getting the kite back up.
Thanks for sharing that @ermanakbay. Sorry you were at risk, but I'm very glad that habit helped you out.
Thx I had not considered the counter steer option. Appreciate seeding ideas before they become an issue.
I had a death loop last month on 9m XR7. I overflew a jump and the kite tumbled and inverted, wind was too strong to flag it back to normal, but no biggie- was in knee deep water, so I popped the Chicken Loop. Unfortunately the inversion turned into partial inversion with a death loop (probably helped by the dual line flag out).- could not resist its power or make any progress to resolving it. After 6-8 loops I had to punch out of the kite and then chase it down- luckily someone else caught my drifting kite, no damage. So yes safety systems worked and could not think of an alternative since I was already on one line with bar out of reach.
Its been a long time!! and yet another gold standard video without a doubt, which can save your life. Thx to your videos, I had 2 death loops only in my early days as a kite surfer (ejecting the CL worked) and feel real safe flying it now, and had none in years. However, Ill give a try by generating it myself in light wind to train how to use the counter steering method to unwrap... better to have it done once when under control than having to figure it out when you approach a wall... (in light winds, with 2 miles free downwind along the beach..)
thx a million for your efforts.
Thanks for sharing Dnaiel. I think a light wind counter steer practice is a good idea for someone who is ready and (as you say) has the correct conditions. I have a friend (who is a good kiter) who recently kept self launching and landing in light wind even when there's a group of us at the beach. I asked him why, and he explained he was trying to improve those skills in light wind in case he ever really needed them, which then made a lot of sense.
Another great video - I recommend this channel to anyone I give lessons to. Interesting the clip with self / drift launching - the only times I've experienced death loops have been drift launching where a steering line wrapped around the wingtip. Counter steering sorted a couple, and CR release another time. When the dunes are fast approaching, time to eject!!
Hi Wayne, I mainly use rebels and they have a bridle large enough that the bridle can catch on the wingtip during a drift launch. I know to watch for it now (you can tell if the bridle has caught on the wingtip from the kite's slightly distorted shape) and if it has I usually give a few pumps on the center lines (pulling in and out so the center lines slack and tense a few times) and then the bridle pops off.
Brilliant video, thanks a lot. Highly appreciate what you are doing for our sport 🙏
Thanks for another great video mate! 👍🏾
Very good and interesting video! Hopefully I never have to use it, but better be prapared :)
There is one important tip though that isn't mentioned nor showed correctly. When you pull in a single line (like you see at 3:56) make sure you grab the line with your hand position correctly. In this video clip you see the kiter grabbing the line with the inside of the hand facing upwards. I wouldn't recommend this.
For a safer and better grip you always should grab a line the opposite way, so with your hand facing down (thumb towards your body). After you grabbed the line, you can turn your hand a little so your thumb is up 👍 and the inside of your hand is facing towards your body. With doing this, you create a turning point in the line, which will decrease the risk of cutting/hurting your hand with the line.
Brilliant explanation and huge thanks for it! Cheers
Great video as always!
Thanks very much Luigi
This should be required at kite schools, when i had my first death loop my biggest mistake was pulling the wrong lines. This explanation could have prevented it.
Great video thanks
Another great video.. thank you
Cheers Rob
I've had the bar go under my harness very early on in my kitesurfing journey. And obviously this rendered both safety symptoms ineffective. I accidently jumped, ended up in the lines with the Kite crashed and the kite was powered up in the wind ending up in the bar going under the harness. Extremely scary stuff
Thanks for sharing you example Patrick. What did you do next and what happened?
I feel very lucky that in my almost 3 years kitting I have not experienced a death loop and hope that my luck continues!
Thank you, nice Video. Had a deathloop in 40 knots. Release didnt work after first 4 loops. Managed to dump it in the dunes.
Thanks for sharing Alex, that must have been properly scary. So the chicken loop eject failed, and then you ejected the leash? Do you remember what set off the death loop?
The set up was off a drift launch. One bridle lay over the tip. Once the kite caught wind it took a split second for it to start looping and it went on and on. I couldn´t react fast enough and was overwhelmed by the strong pull of the kite. The water was only ankle deep. The wind blew on shore and it was a proper storm. The beach downwind was full of onlookers. I ejected and the kite lost power but the safety didn´t go the full way, maybe a couple of meters. The kite lost a good amount of power and I was able to get a foot hold. Yet it was still looping at around 1 loop in 10 seconds. I couldn´t let go of the kite because of the full beach downwind. So I went towards the beach and dunes step by step. Had to wait for some old geezers to get out of the f**king way when I was about to leave the water, as if they didnt notice me coming closer, step by step. Then the kite looped into a dune and stoped. That was quite a relief.
This tore up a wingtip, nothing serious. I was lucky and learned multiple lessons from this incident.
Once I got steering line wrapped after a crash in 10+ m/s and got deathlooped to the beach with trees very fast. Luckily I train all new things quite far from shore (but not too far😎), so I got plenty of time to think about my life and eject chicken loop.
Thanks!!
Thanks so much
I've heard that after about 10 loops, the line twists from a death-looping kite will likely prevent a kite from flagging out. So I count loops if my kite starts uncontrolled looping, and if I haven't stopped the looping with advanced techniques ( counter steering or manually flagging ), I resort to chicken loop release at 5 loops.
Anyone else have experience with twisted lines choking the flag-out ?
10 Is a lot... I would get worried after 3 loops, that's where the sketchy threshold begins.
Another great video, and I would say a really important one!
I still ride the F-one monolith bar, which I believe has the dual line flag out system that keeps death looping after ejecting in the video at 14:53. I have heard people say before the monolith bar shouldn't be used anymore for that reason. I didn't think much of it until I saw the rider in your video with the death loop. What are your thoughts on the topic?
Thanks very much. I had a friend with that bar get into a bad death loop and never wanted to kite again. It is known to lead to death loops when there's a kite inversion or bridle snag etc. I have heard there is a fix for the bar to make it a single line flag out, but it's probably not simple and might be better to upgrade when you can. What condition is the bar in, do the lines have much life left? The main issue with keeping the bar will be you have much higher that the kite will keep flying/looping after the chicken loop eject and therefore there's a higher chance of needing to also eject the leash.
@@kitesurfcollege the lines are in good condition. Sounds like I should upgrade irregardless...
I had 2 situations to report: on a lake with on and off gusty wind, my kite dropped on the water during a 0 wind while, the lines became slacked, the kite galled turning upside down on itself so the lines were not in normal position and the slack lines turned around my board pads. Then the wind picked up suddenly…and the loop started, one line being pulled by my board.
so it was unclear what to do. I then released the CL….
Another situation is on a more stable side wind, around 20kts, I realized that my wife, quite beginner, was loosing to much ground from the starting beach. I suggested her to come back to the beach in bodydrag, and I did followed her on this manœuvre.
Suddenly she turned her kite to mine, probably asking a question and both kites started to turn together. I immediately released my CL , and asked her to do the same, but kites started to loop with lines possibly turning around her body. I had not other chance to release totally my kite, then ask her to do the same. Both started kite far dancing together, then moving individually. One stopped on the beach and the other one on a dead tree, and was very damaged. I now realize that both bars were old models, without one sliding line but both attached together. This is possibly why first CL release didn’t clearly worked. I will ban this bar for the future.
Hi Nicolas. Thanks for sharing your examples. What bar were you using? The old core and f one bars were common and had the dual-center-line flag out. Also, when your board got caught on your lines, did the CL eject do its job?
@@kitesurfcollege It was RRD old bar . Good quality, long life lines but I didn’t made relation between obsolete design and actual safety issue. The CL eject system always worked fine.
I had 2 , for me and my wife and used them with several different kites. I now moved to foil kites, mostly with dedicated bar, and purchased new bars for other kites, but still have them.
Danke!
Hi The Sailing Lord, thanks so much for your support, all the best, Alex
DO NOT MANUALLY flag out the kite!
Get a 5th lines
DeathLoops traumatize me 😂