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Forums > Kitesurfing General

How strong should a death-leash be ?

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Created by waveslave > 9 months ago, 2 May 2013
waveslave
WA, 4263 posts
2 May 2013 8:06PM
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How strong ....?

Well,

It should be strong enough to handle a fully depowered kite that wants to flog itself in nuke-wind,

but then again,

it shouldn't be so strong as to act as a tow-rope pulling a kiter along at speed in a death-drag,

So, how strong should it be?

Should there be some weak link or something ?

lol.

Katz
VIC, 131 posts
2 May 2013 10:26PM
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[}:)] Troll!

Can the system just link this topic with the other leash threads in some kind of recursive death spiral?

surfingboye
NSW, 2707 posts
2 May 2013 10:29PM
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would be a better thread in the 'dude and man' format.
food for thought,
lol.

your street slave?



greenleader
QLD, 5283 posts
2 May 2013 11:46PM
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nooooo, not another death leash thread

gcdave
534 posts
3 May 2013 5:40AM
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As strong as ur leggie,for full effect

Lambie
QLD, 742 posts
3 May 2013 8:17AM
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Death leash = safety (kite) leash??? (not the old boring board leash thread?)

All my safety leashes also have a quick release in the event that I want to completly disconect myself from the kite - I was of the opinion that all safety leashes were made that way W'slave - what are you using???

So your safety leash should be very strong and able to hold the pull of a depowered kite until YOU want to jetson it !

radman4
678 posts
3 May 2013 9:14AM
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greenleader said...
nooooo, not another death leash thread




Nice one

kiterdan
WA, 680 posts
3 May 2013 9:36AM
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I actually think that it is a sensible post.

There should be a breaking strain on leashes in the off-chance that the kite doesn't depower....leash wrapped around the bar preventing the kite from flagging, suicide leash engaged after a snapped line, kite getting dragged in with the waves etc.

Perhaps there could be different breaking strains for lighter or heavier kiters or different sized kites?


GalahOnTheBay
NSW, 4188 posts
3 May 2013 1:54PM
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Ok I will bite (it makes a change to posting in Heavy Weather at least)

By definition, a leash and all attachment points should hold full forces for the rider on all kites in all conditions the rider is likely to be out in.

Otherwise it will break and be, well, useless.

Remember if you choose a death or suicide leash, those forces will be "large"

Having a leash that breaks is not a sign of a safety mechanism, it's a sign that something is wrong in the "safety" system.

eppo
WA, 9793 posts
3 May 2013 3:30PM
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I remember back in 2000 on a two line foil got hit by a 40 to 59 knots gust trying to milk the last bit out of an incoming big ass storm. Got lofted I to the dunes, was holding onto some scrub to avoid being pitched into the carpark, the 'safety' ( a piece of rope attached to somewhere, can't remember ( ha ha ha) finally snapped. Saved my ass.



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"How strong should a death-leash be ?" started by waveslave