paddymac said...
When I was starting out I ended up with a mish mash of gear and didn't really have the know how to get the best out of it - especially a NP mast for a Gaastra sail which never seemed to rig right. I got retrenched and with the payout traded everything on some new kit. 2 boards, 4 sails, 2 masts, 4 fins - all consistent brand+model. I reckon it really helps me to get the rigs set up right no matter which sails/board. So it's not loyalty in my case - more practicality.
i think this is the smart way to go, it makes sense to get the sail with the right mast/boom/extention combo then rig to the sail specs...it takes so much of the guess work out of the equation.
my circumstance as described above is not entirely by choice more by economics.
for most of my windsurfing life i have bought gear second hand and as such have accumulated a real mish mash.it has been interesting experimemting with different combos (mast/sail) etc to try and find the right set up.when you are running a couple of different board and sail sizes,then this juggling/experimenting act grows.
as for brand loyalty,i dont think i have ever sailed a bad board (apart from a javelin2.6

) all the boards i have ridden (spanning 29odd yrs) have been great fun,
some where better than others but all where fun.it was and still is the case for me that i have to adapt to a new board,not the other way around.
when i got a new(for a change

) isonic a couple of yrs ago i initially didnt like it because i couldnt gybe it effectively...i even filled in the cutouts to see if that would help...anyway after a couple of months i started to get it dialled and now i love it.
its all good fun and all the manufacturers have pretty good gear in my opinion.