I've noticed alot of the speed guys use seat harnesses. Especially those doing looong days on flat water (like many 100ks on LG)
Is the reason for the seat harness due to comfort for long distance? Or a performance thing?
Its interesting to compare that nearly all pwa slalom riders and many of those on the canal going for the record use a waist harness. But those races and runs are over quick.
Im personally wondering if I should get a seat harness, as I get back ache sailing on the same tack for long distances. which isn't an issue when doing short runs bump and jumping in the ocean. (waist is super comfy for this)
Speed sailing on flatwater a seat harness is great.
But in open sea( chop and swell) a waist harness is a must too absorb the chop, as a seat harness is too locked in, wearing a seat harness is asking for a catapult. This is why pwa riders use them
But there's always exceptions for some people
Im personally wondering if I should get a seat harness, as I get back ache sailing on the same tack for long distances.
Yes.
Keep in mind that PWA slalom races only last a few minutes. Even a day with a few completed eliminations amount to less than an hour of actual racing, spread out over the day with breaks in between. Very different from distance speedsurfing where you sail hours without breaks.
i sail slalom kit in choppy, rough water, often for over an hour non-stop (save for crashed gybes)...
a game changer for me was the Liberty XO (Crossover) harness (which, by the way, many pros use; even if their aggregated time on the water on competition day may be an hour or less, they do train for longer and harder than most of us ride). it is a low waist harness with a butt pad, so a cross between a seat and a waist harness; but unlike a traditional seat harness, it doesn't lock in your hips and legs. Starboard/Drake also make a version of the same design, but it's a bit stiffer than the original Liberty (which has a soft carbon shell). please note the sizing, as it runs large (so if you're typically an L, you'll likely be an M in this harness). it's important your bar pad is long enough to almost have overlap with the harness ends.
before this harness, after an hour of riding i was ready to scream. now i can sail for longer with less discomfort, and this has actually helped my results. in more than a few sessions, the conditions haven't really lined up until well into the second hour of riding when in my older waist and seat harnesses i would have been hurting (if not off the water altogether); having energy in reserve to push and get a decent result at that stage of a session was priceless.
Distance. Seat harness with a sliding bar.
I have really wide harness lines and I can move along them if necessary. Does this give anything like a sliding bar affect?
I have really wide harness lines and I can move along them if necessary. Does this give anything like a sliding bar affect?
not quite; almost the opposite effect, i'd think...
the idea of a sliding bar is that you can adjust your body posture (thereby reducing fatigue) while still maintaining the optimum rig trim (rake and sheet angle).
having your harness lines really wide apart just makes your rig more sensitive to any shift in your body position/weight balance; so in a way that kinda requires you to be more locked in to a position.
Distance. Seat harness with a sliding bar.
I have really wide harness lines and I can move along them if necessary. Does this give anything like a sliding bar affect?
No. What they said ^^^^^
I have really wide harness lines and I can move along them if necessary. Does this give anything like a sliding bar affect?
not quite; almost the opposite effect, i'd think...
the idea of a sliding bar is that you can adjust your body posture (thereby reducing fatigue) while still maintaining the optimum rig trim (rake and sheet angle).
having your harness lines really wide apart just makes your rig more sensitive to any shift in your body position/weight balance; so in a way that kinda requires you to be more locked in to a position.
ok. I always thought wider lines would be less sensitive than the narrow ones...
i sail slalom kit in choppy, rough water, often for over an hour non-stop (save for crashed gybes).
a game changer for me was the Liberty XO (Crossover) harness
Ive decided to go with the liberty xo option.
The wait time is long and it's very pricey, but I think it will do the trick.
I realised almost all my troubles are in moderate conditions when I'm really hiked out and back, while going across the wind a and I'm really pushing with straight legs and arms to rail/ fly the board for a long runs. I have no issues with the waist harness when fully powered with a sunken stance, when going off the wind, or on a multi fin board in the ocean.
So in moderate conditions, Transferring some of that load from the sides of my back to the seat flap of the xo seems like a solution. One which won't kill control when long distance gps blasting in the ocean across waves, like a seat harness might.
Where did you buy it from?
libertywinds.jp/products/harness/index2023.html
Placed an order by emailing these guys^
i sail slalom kit in choppy, rough water, often for over an hour non-stop (save for crashed gybes).
a game changer for me was the Liberty XO (Crossover) harness
Ive decided to go with the liberty xo option.
The wait time is long and it's very pricey, but I think it will do the trick.
great! hope it does the job for you as well!
quite a few of them in evidence at the PWA Torbole event recently completed.
I think there are few untested assumptions about seat harnesses here. I always sail seat harness. 100+km days in rough seas with no problem. If you have any kind of lower back problem (which I do) they are much to be preferred. I can't think of any time when I was out blasting in 1-2 metre swells with chop on top where the seast harness prevented adequate control.
The reason most speed sailors wear a seat harness is that we are all old farts with stuffed backs...
The reason most speed sailors wear a seat harness is that we are all old farts with stuffed backs...
Some more than than others
i sail slalom kit in choppy, rough water, often for over an hour non-stop (save for crashed gybes)...
a game changer for me was the Liberty XO (Crossover) harness (which, by the way, many pros use; even if their aggregated time on the water on competition day may be an hour or less, they do train for longer and harder than most of us ride). it is a low waist harness with a butt pad, so a cross between a seat and a waist harness; but unlike a traditional seat harness, it doesn't lock in your hips and legs. Starboard/Drake also make a version of the same design, but it's a bit stiffer than the original Liberty (which has a soft carbon shell). please note the sizing, as it runs large (so if you're typically an L, you'll likely be an M in this harness). it's important your bar pad is long enough to almost have overlap with the harness ends.
before this harness, after an hour of riding i was ready to scream. now i can sail for longer with less discomfort, and this has actually helped my results. in more than a few sessions, the conditions haven't really lined up until well into the second hour of riding when in my older waist and seat harnesses i would have been hurting (if not off the water altogether); having energy in reserve to push and get a decent result at that stage of a session was priceless.
Very tempted by the Liberty. I bought a new hard shell ION last year and it is very nice, but it does ride up if you are slogging and you do not disengage promptly, and it is giving me some serious trouble with my chest (it puts pressure on my ribs and it hurts, even after the session is ended, a lot!).