I had a good day using my Mikeslab Bullet 6 yesterday with my first time over 29 knots. It still felt very stable and in control.
Pretty amazing. What are the water surface conditions where you're hitting these speeds?
Thanks. Super flat water (offshore wind) in Portland harbour, UK.
However I've done 26knots quite comfortably in short onshore chop. But it might be hard to get 29.
I also have the Mikeslab 700. This is fast too but nothing like the Bullet. (I only had that at 26 knots on Sunday).
The odd thing about the Bullet 6 is that it has a short fuselage (tip to tip is 58cm) so you would expect it to be very unstable, but it isn't.
It also has a massive stabiliser (and is quite low aspect) which you might assume would make for a slow foil (based on all the hype about smaller thinner stabs being faster).
Thanks. Super flat water (offshore wind) in Portland harbour, UK.
However I've done 26knots quite comfortably in short onshore chop. But it might be hard to get 29.
I also have the Mikeslab 700. This is fast too but nothing like the Bullet. (I only had that at 26 knots on Sunday).
The odd thing about the Bullet 6 is that it has a short fuselage (tip to tip is 58cm) so you would expect it to be very unstable, but it isn't.
It also has a massive stabiliser (and is quite low aspect) which you might assume would make for a slow foil (based on all the hype about smaller thinner stabs being faster).
That makes sense. I'm mostly riding in onshore conditions where chop is big. In the one flat spot, I was able to hit 24 knots, but the runway is so short that I'm just getting up to speed when I have to turn. Otherwise, I generally cap out around 22-23 knots in chop. I'm planning a speed session day at an offshore spot the next time it lines up properly. I've got a 340 so I figure I should be able to get in the upper 20s with that one. Amazing foils