waxman said...
there isnt much difference as it all depends how you lookafter it. all bars and lines wear, pullys seize and bladers leak but they can all be fixed.
Interesting. Reliability in my opinion is in having a kite that wont leave you stranded out to sea, in front of a bomb set or busting to bits in 40 knot gusts. Reliability is in the design, and the materials. By eliminating fatal flaws you increase the reliability. So really a 4 line C kite with 800pd lines and a fixed bar is about as reliable as you can get. You just don't get the benefit of depower and range. Other kites offer the same reliability, but with range and depower.
Imagine if your leg rope had two pulleys and had to be lubed up and serviced before you went surfing? How many of those would you sell, how many "dudes" would be spewing seeing their board smashed on the rocks when it let go?
I see reliability as a kite you pack up, and unpack on the beach for the next session with out any "maintenance" work.
Suit yourself guys, but there are a lot of kiters like me that treat their kites with contempt and often wear the consequences. Get a kite that suits your personality and you'll be right.
If you like cleaning and preening your kites - go with whatever
If you like to ride, pack up and go home, then think carefully.
I don't mind occasionally rinsing my lines, but pulling out a 13m kite to "lubricate" it in the shed is just one massive PITA! And spending $100 for a new bridle and pulleys is bull****.
I've almost died many times due to chicken rope, pulley, line and bridle failure.
I am sick of maintaining poor design and crappy materials so I now fly Ozone.
and no I don't sell them!