GalahOnTheBay said...WOW

That thing is HUGE, it almost looks fake it's so big...
I wonder what the usable wind range is?

I was at a festival in Adelaide in 1995 when Peter flew what was then a world record for the largest kite I think it was around 850 sqM, it was so huge the a whole primary school of kids could fit inside it!! Peter would semi inflate it in the mornings and conduct tours through the body of the kite for the local schools. True!
I remember seeing it lift off for the first time, I was on one side of the Semaphore pier and it was on the other and it looked totally surreal and a bit like a scene from the sci fi movie Independence Day!!
A storm came through that weekend while this thing was flying, the tether was an 8 ton ton 4wd flat top truck with 8 tons of concrete blocks on the back. The main line was flat braided Spectra approx 40mm x 4mm, with some ridiculous braking strain. The storm literally destroyed the event in moments, it approached so fast we could not get the kites down in time. The tail of the MegaRay tore off,
(retrieved from the water 500M offshore by Peter on a big foot buggy flying a land kite of some sort). Phils big and super stable 120sqM parafoil tethered to the back of a holden rodeo 4wd was lifting the back end of the rodeo off the ground and dragging it down the beach. I saw a large sumo wrestler kite split its guts, and the current world record attempt for the most box kite flown (144 kites) in a single line train was also destroyed and was showering box kites all around us as we stood gaping at the mayhem.
I know it was 1995 because an extremely valuable Peter Lloyd Rokaku kite was lost in the storm and blew downwind and inland a few klms, and returned to the Festival Site with a very small hole in it. Peter kindly donated the kite to be auctioned off as a fund raiser for the festival and I purchased the kite for a small fortune after being stung at the auction by my kiting buddies who all bailed on the bidding after they had reached the street number of my first shop!!
Later on myself and a dozen others were helping Peter pack up the massive body of the kite, to take back to Phil McConachie's kite loft for repairs, as it was booked to be flown in France (at the same location as in the video I believe) the following weekend. It was at this time that we discovered the extent of the massive forces that were created in the storm, the tether line was fused solid where it was tied to the truck!! Upper wind range would be approx 20 knots and I would estimate that we had about double that when the squall hit and then winds stayed around 25 knots for the rest of the day, it was hectic to say the least. I flew some of the very first PL arc proto kites at this festival too, we flew them on massive handles, not a bar!!
Peter also managed to get that parafoil down that was tied to the back of the rodeo, he reversed the truck and drove it full speed down the beach and just managed to get the kite to luff and invert before driving under the next low pier in front of the Semaphore Pub about 2klms down the beach.
Those were the days!!