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Wind speed table
- Kites listed by wind range
- Kites for strong breezes
- kites for medium or fresh breezes
- kites for light breezes
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A good way to judge the wind range of a kite is to check its towing point position on the chart. Light wind towing points are over around 48%. Fresh wind towing points are significantly less than (about) 47%.
Strong Breeze Deltas
There is really only the one:
- the Trooper (flies in fairly light winds, too, but at a lower angle)
- the bigger version - the Trooper QM (see medium-sized kites catalogs)
Medium-to-Fresh Breezes
- the R-series kites - R4 Ranger, R5-C Rustler, R8, R10
- Wildcard
- Cliptip DC345 (experimental)
Medium Breeze Deltas
Good for up to fresh breezes:
- MD-4
- R6-C and XFS Delta - good for working light winds as well
Light-to-Medium Wind Deltas
The smaller sizes of a given design have the widest wind range
- Drifter, Burrito, Khatib (well into medium winds)
- SD-5
- Whirlwind, X-100 (experimental), Skyhook
- CL-88, LC345
- Scout, Aztec
- Li'l Stinker, Skipper
Strictly Light Wind Deltas
Flying these in the wrong winds has been known to permanently damage them (if not by direct structural failure, then in a more subtle way by unevenly stretching the fabric, which may never recover. These kites are designed for maximum efficiency in light winds - not to withstand abuse.
- CC345, GLC345
- Little Bear, Clippers
- Cirrus
- Carbon Flyers
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Wind speed table
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