Quad Precision -- Precisely what and
why???
by Sandy Wagner
Quadline
competition has been around since the late 1980's and has evolved into something very
different
here in America compared to the rest of the world. In
the United States, there is no such classification as Quadline Precision in competition.
In Europe and Japan, this category is required for all quadline competitors.
I never really considered this much of an issue until a couple of
years ago when I received an invitation to compete against the finest quadline pilots of
Europe in Guadaloupe in 1997. The top American pilots were put against the top European
pilots. As we were playing by European rules, I would be required to fly precision as well
as ballet and have both scores tallied.
This brought a major issue into focus for me. Although I had never
competed in a quadline precision event, I felt I had the ability to do well as an
accomplished quadline flier and indeed, the American pilots were all anxious to try their
lines at this new class of competition.
Of course, we did lousy in precision as we were unfamiliar with the
maneuvers until a few months before the event, while our competitors had been flying them
for their entire careers. That however, is not really the issue.
The issue is whether or not Quadline Precision is a valuable
classification of our sport. Should the U.S. begin to require Quadline Precision events?
Precision flying has been around as long as competition in
multi-line kiting. It forces us to become better fliers and gives us a standard against
which we can judge performance. The more we work with our precision, the more perfect our
straight lines, corners, and turns become, the more graceful our ballet becomes. If I feel
this strongly about precision flying, you may ask, why any controversy?
Quadline is a bit different than dual line in terms of precision
competition for one very important reason. One kite has dominated the quadline competition
market since its invention in the 1980's. This is no way is to say anything bad about the
kite or the company that makes it; they simply created the best quadline kite to date.
As the Revolution became the standard quadline kite to compete with
both here in America and in Europe and in Japan, precision maneuvers were developed based
on the ability of this kite. Foils were out. Their lack of precision, slow speed, and
difficult amounts of pull made them less suited for ballet and more suited to power
kiting.
The powers that be created a series of maneuvers based on the
abilities of the Revolution. They did not take into consideration the quadlined deltas
that were out there, or the possibility of new kites. This is not the fault of any of the
leagues, it is simply a matter of what was going on in the sport. Quadline competitors
flew Revs. That was that. From the day the Rev was invented and put on the market in the
80's, no other kite could take it at the national level. From 1988 until 1995 every AKA
Quadline Championship was won by a Revolution kite.
That makes the use of the Rev as the standard for precision moves
seem to make sense. However, In 1995 the Synergy Deca was introduced and took the title
away from the Rev. That same year top finishers included people flying the TC Ultra as a
quad as well.
Although all dual line kites have different flight characteristics,
many are suited to precision flying. Because there are so few quadline kites geared
towards competition, and because the Revolution is so dominant in this small field, the
maneuvers are designed to specifically show excellent precision flying of a Revolution
kite, not a quadline kite.
Enough of the gripe. Whether the compulsories that are currently
used favor one kite or another still doesn't answer the more important question of whether
or not Quad Precision should be flown as a competitive event.
Don't just take it from me. Take it from any of the world's
greatest fliers. Especially at the earlier stages of your flying, precision flying will
improve your abilities as a kite flier. They force you to make moves that you would
normally take for granted and not practice over and over again. Precision teaches you
speed control and forces you to learn to do things with your kite you may otherwise never
do. That pushes us to the top end of our abilities and then lets us learn the tricks and
explore the outermost edges of what our kites can do.
As I said earlier, precision also sets a standard. Styles may differ
from coast to coast, continent to continent, but precision figures do not. In order for
the United States to compete in quadline competition around the globe, our fliers will
need to show that they can achieve that standard as well. If we want our sport to move
toward an international level, maybe one day an Olympic level, we all need to operate on
the same standard.
The current precision figures that are used in competitions around
the globe (except here in the US) are available at http://utopia.knoware.nl/users/pr-stack/cr01comp.htm
These are according to STACK rules and are the maneuvers used in World Cup competition.
I suggest we all get to know these maneuvers. We want our sport to
grow and be recognized. I may not agree that the figures are fair to all quadline fliers,
but they are a standard. Without that standard across the kiting world, we will never have
an international sport. Without working on precision, we cannot be the fliers we are
capable of.

On a slightly different note, I have decided after over one year of
writing for KiteLife to give up this column. Family, work, and life in general are
beginning to get in the way of the kiting for me. Sharing my ideas and feelings about
quadline kites has been a pleasure. I appreciate all the feedback and hope I have given
some insight to other quad fliers. Keep those extra two lines! Hopefully I will see many
of you on the kite fields soon. I'll be the one trying to figure out how to fly a quad and
feed a baby at the same time!!! 

Sandy and Kimberly Wagner
swagner@lynnet.com
http://www.lynnet.com/~swagner
Kookaburra Kites
http://www.lynnet.com/~warder