It seems that many of the old windsurfing brands have several lives: HiFly, just revitalised as a fashion brandhad actually already disappeared from the market by 1986: The former owner Akutec had been liquidated, but an employee had secured the rights to the name and sold them to the company Rotex, which then revived the brand a few months later. "Internationally, the HiFly name is still hugely important and has a good reputation, so it would have been a shame to let it go under," says one manager. However, the new owner emphasises that he is not responsible for warranty claims for older HiFly boards. In addition, Rotex has not been able to purchase any of the old machines and is therefore unable to reproduce spare parts. For the new start, HiFly is launching a 370, a 355 and a 330, with a smaller slalom board still to come - all produced in "Marlite", a polypropylene. However, the Marlin brand is to be phased out in the long term.
"It's Crossbow-killing-day!" was the slogan at the Nabisco Speed Trial on Fuerteventura on 21 July 1986. The racing catamaran "Crossbow" had held the world record for sailing boats until then, but then came Pascal Maka. With a four-person sail and eight to nine wind forces, he set a speed of 71.97 km/h, almost five km/h faster than the old record. Maka had a perfect day and completed 20 more runs - all of them faster than the old cat record. In addition to a speed needle, the Frenchman also rides a near-series Gaastra sail with camber (still awkwardly referred to as a "camber inducer" in the report). No more of the special rigs of years gone by, which cancels out their theoretical advantages by being too heavy. One of the most extreme boards was ridden by second-placed Eric Beale: "How he manages to fold his feet on the tail, which is only 15 centimetres wide at the start, is an anatomical mystery to many," the authors marvelled. The women's event was won by 16-year-old Britt Dunkerbeck, who had bought her record-breaking board second-hand from shaper Jimmy Lewis just the day before. The duel with Crossbow was to go even further, however, as their designer was caught intensively studying the competition during a speed week.
After the "profiled sail shock" (surf's original quote) two years ago, the industry is once again in a state of frenzy. The cut-away trend can no longer be tamed, and more and more manufacturers are launching new models in the middle of the season with jags in the leech and a wide flared top, even though the shops' warehouses are still full. "In the ski industry, it would be unthinkable to approach the media with an innovation in the middle of the season," grumbles one businessman. After the first attempts at Speedweeks, former NeilPryde people brought the trend to Lake Garda in Europe and now everyone wants to jump on board. The theory is plausible - the sail can twist at the top in gusts without having to be sheet out, the centre of effort moves forwards - but the practice is different: Manufacturers are worried about durability because of the often fluttering top, the soft profile costs performance. "The Cut Away stands for surfing fun and handling, not speed," says North man Eckart Wagner. The first test on the Sea of Galilee in Israel shows that the basic idea works for most of the prototypes, but the sails are barely rideable in the extreme range. Conclusion: The positive characteristics are generated by a twisting top - whether with cut away or other moderate cuts is irrelevant
He invented the camera perspective from the mast, in which the windsurfer photographs himself: Angus Chater, whose spectacular pictures had been featured in almost all major magazines in the years before, committed suicide at the age of just 26. The story of how his photo construction came about is rather sad: because Angus was not recognised by most professionals in Hawaii as a Brit, the photographer and shaper hardly got any good shots. So he came up with this way of photographing himself, because Chater was a very good surf surfer himself and liked to be the centre of attention. However, he was an outsider without many friends, writes Uli Stanciu in his obituary. His most important reference person was his wife Pam, whom he had married for a residence permit and with whom he only later developed a real love. After a serious accident, he followed the surfing scene to Maui, but his relationship with Pam broke down due to the distance. Chater saw no other way out than suicide.
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