Flying Experience
The first time I picked up the Acrobatx I simply could not put it down. There was so much to do with the kite that my mind was constantly running through ideas for new tricks while I went through the range of "normal" tricks. My usual start with the comete was a little tough. It took me till my third try to get the timing right on the 4 and 1 pops for the succeeding rotations as the kite wanted to go and sit in a turtle immediately. Once I figured that out I tried my favorite trick, the crazy copter and Im quite sure that was the start of a very nice with the Acrobatx. This is, bar none, the absolute easiest kite to crazy copter I have ever flown. If you want to learn how to do the trick this is THE kite to learn it on. Dead center of the window in 10-12mph winds it was absolutely not a problem. Likewise yo-fades were easy to get into, but a little hard to tend the fade. An immediate backspin once you're in the yo-fade was an excellent exit.
It immediately felt like precision was not the intention of the kite, so I proceeded to go through the list of usual suspects on the trick list. Jacob's ladders were simple and hard to do incorrectly. Multilazies were extremely simple and nearly impossibly to do wrong once the kite was on its back. Yo-yos were fast and accessible without any modifications. Insanes required a little bit more pulling to keep the kite from flattening out into a turtle, but I found this to be a very nice thing to make for some amazing trick combos coming from and going to insanes / multilazies / cometes / cascades. Cascades themselves were a little tough to keep clean, but the ability to chain them with other tricks that many other kites do not make easy was a good tradeoff.
This is the only kite I've seen that not only will yo-yo very quickly from a nose-back/forward or half-backspin and also do very slow 2-pop yo-yos. Multiple rollups are easy from either method as well.
Side slides were actually pretty easy considering the style of kite. "Old-school" tricks do not seem to be the intention of the kite, but in the hands of a pilot capable of the tricks it held up admirably. I can't think of a common trick I haven't seen done on the Acrobatx, so if you have the skill it is there waiting for you.
In lighter wind I found the kite to be somewhat harder to fly. Winds above 5mph were much more fun with the Acrobatx for me personally, the kite requires a quick hand to keep in check as the winds come down. I would not entirely attribute this to the kite itself, I am simply not entirely adept at low wind flying.
In our test flights at KTAI however, we added another 10 grams of weight and moved the bridle adjustment near the top spreader fittings to the first knot (closest to the kite)... In this configuration, it seemed to better dial into precision moves, dropped some oversteer and went in and out of turtle positions with ease to the point where John Barresi didn't put it down for 20 minutes or so, doing all of his best moves with minimal effort in a 3-5 mph breeze.
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