The following is my unfiltered thoughts on the 2024 HA 4.4m sail, this would be for anyone looking into foiling or upgrading their foil sails for the summer Season. Well worth mentioning, Kasper79 has made a couple of great YouTube videos on the 8.0 and the 6.8m, I'm keen to test these too. (I have a face for radio, so no video from me. :-) )
For context, I'm 51, 6ft, 83kg's, questionably fit, started sailing at the end of March 2025 after an almost 20-year hiatus. I'm not sponsored, none of this is Ai, feel free to laugh at the errors!
I originally started windsurfing in the late 80s, got into Slalom and a bit of Wave sailing, sailed in Perth mostly, also a bit in Lancelin, Margaret River, Geraldton, Hawaii and Bali, was no Dunkerbeck, got bored, jumped into cycling, life changed, moved interstate, met someone, had kids got a real job, moved back to Perth.
On the water Gear:
Patrik 85 prototype slalom board, Patrik 380 80% carbon mast, Patrik carbon mast base, Patrik mast foot & the old Neilpryde boom, Aeon 95 DIM-S mast, Aluminium V2 Fuselage, 450 DNA-H Front wings, 160 DNA-H Backwing, .75, 1, 1.25 and 1.5 Shims. Special shout-out to Mark from Surf Sail Australia in West Leederville, where I purchased most of my gear & this sail. www.surfsailaustralia.com.au/products/Windsurfing-Sails/Patrik#surf-sail-clothing-hardware
The review:
It's taken a while to review this one as Perth's winter storms are inconsistent, rarely 25 - 30 kts sweet spot range for this sail. When a cold front does come in, it's gusty, shifty and unpredictable. I've taken this sail out 10 times now, some of those sessions have been coupled with the words "bugger, not enough wind - should have rigged a bigger sail or Faaaark this is way too much". When the right wind range does kick in, this sail shines.
In short, it's smooth, stable, nimble and scary fast.
I'm using a prototype board while I figure out if I'm buying a Foil Comp, Race or Foil Slalom Gen3. Special thanks to Patrik & Mark for providing the right advice.
For a small sail, this one packs a mighty punch, but it took me some time to learn how to manage this pint-sized juggernaut and get the most out of it. I'm writing this after 4 months down the river now, and I still don't think I have mastered it all. Initially, I actually thought I'd made the wrong call on this size, my self-talk was - I'm still learning, I don't want to go out in 25 plus kts, this is nuts! Stick with sub 20 kts, but after a few sessions, it all started to make sense.
Captain obvious here, the first thing to note is this sail is for foiling! HA (High Aspect), it's not a windsurfing sail, (where you can ride off the fin and sheet in hard with the back hand). This took some time to get used to. In fact, it felt empty on the backhand and out of habit, I would sheet in and fall in when the wind dropped. (noob) I guess I could use it as a Windsurfing sail, but I don't think it's as comfortable as a standard slalom sail with the longer boom.
Initially, the sail was set up with 4 or 5 batten spacers in each of the bottom 3 cams, so once rigged, it had a full belly. On the water, this meant power. It had so much forward pulling bottom-end power for a small sail, I felt like I was going to be catapulted all the time, and that old boom tends to let me down too. In foiling, I've slowly realised I don't need to whip the sail all the way back and parallel to the board; it's more of an upright vertical action. This way, the sail and board speed feels more efficient, left open, closer to 4:00-5:00 (from the nose), standing upright with bent legs in the Kung-Fu 'Horse position' and long harness lines. Trimming them in as the speed builds. The sail's power forces the board speed to build quickly with very little backhand. The Aeon pops up into flight mode and still makes me giggle and swear like an exhilarated teenager, then it just slots onto rails at speed. Acceleration is overwhelming to begin with. It took a while for my grey matter to realise that the gear is going to do the right thing by me, I'm there for the fun, and it won't let me down. It leaves me to keep an eye on my ride height, other boats on the water and maintain commitment. Over time, I'm getting a better sense of when it's riding too high. It still amazes me how high I can sail without breaching, even in boat wash & chop. (BTW - In the boat wash the foil feels like someone is spraying my feet with a garden hose through the board) Removing the Cam spacers over a couple of sessions tamed the weapon while retaining 95% of its acceleration, and after a couple of committed pumps off the wind, Oooff - flight time. After a couple of sessions, I could blast off, cross and downwind with less fear. Gybe percentages went up, and so did 'flight times'. The sail is light, easy to throw around, stable enough to trust what it's supposed to do and fast enough to scare the crap out of me. I'm comfortable now in 20 - 30 + kts, and it's good fun and the silence.. it still blows my mind. I think I'm maxed out in 30 kts of wind on the river. I tried it, any more (35 - 40 kts of wind), that's nuts. I was barely holding it upright until these squalls passed, saying faaaaaark!
Side note, with all the spacers, the bottom 3 Cams were difficult to rig, rotate and pop in after a gybe. The Karate chop technique from the Patrik videos baffled me for a while. I didn't realise how much effect the little buggers had on rigging, the sail's shape, and finding the power (balance point) zone. Once these were out of the way, the sail cams rotated perfectly, and felt more in tune with the gear.
Design & style:
As a fan of Mies Van Der Rohe, 'less is more' design aesthetic, this sail appealed to my architectural brain. The black mast sleeve makes practical sense, this is the part of the sail that gets the dirtiest, picking up muck from rolling out, rigging to dragging it over the beach knackered after a quality session, (I have the 2022 6m Foil+ and this is a small problem) the white text on black looks cool too. The clear middle panels are perfect, logo placement looks cool towards the leech, the deep red upper panels look cool and great when the sun is high for shade, but I had to do a double-take, tainting the water red near me. it was a PTSD relapse slicing my foot open off Leighton back in the 90's. The wide Luff Pocket is huge but, I've struggle with the lack of transparency, especially when it's wet. I like to know what's up ahead, downwind and what to expect on the busy Swan River race days, sharing the fun with yachts, Moths, Lazers, Wing Foilers, Kite foilers, down-winders, jet skis, motor boats, ferries and now fast e-foilers; it's high alert all the time. I get structurally why it's 3 layers in the wide Luff Pocket, but it's just too blurry to see through clearly; it becomes critical on the foil when inadvertently shifting body weight forward and backwards. It's not a deal breaker, it just requires a bit more focus when careening my neck around the pocket to look downwind and up ahead and keeping things trimmed. I'm sure with more experience, this will become less of a problem.
Feel & comfort:
It could be me, or my lack of strength or the stage I'm at, this sail does take a rethink instead of relying on Windsurfing muscle memory. That aside, what strikes me the most is how well this sail handles any conditions, especially the strong gusts. As I have gotten used to this sail, finding the right sail settings for the conditions, the ideal harness line position and the balance point or zone, it is super easy to hold position and stay the course. I have to admit I sail the standard cross the wind and upwind when the gusts kick in every session, but this sail continues to give me the confidence to push it. As I've been developing my skills and courage, I've been able to fly downwind at speed. Turns out this is where the magic is, it's like opening the throttle on a Tesla X in Ludicrous mode, it's quiet, intoxicating and never gets old. I don't get the tripping over the foil sensation with this setup. If anything, I just push forward and go with it. The sail cuts through the wind like a knife; this comes in handy in the deeper lulls. I've found a few times I can keep sailing through the lulls for 20 - 50 m, at the end adding a few pumps of the sail and foil. This can be extended, but I haven't mastered the timing right on this technique. In the bigger gusts, maintaining balance and control on the foil is its strong point. It amazed me on a few occasions in what looked like a massive gust I was able to blast through it, adjusting only my weight forward, which accelerated even more. I'm going to say it (no one seems to say it), going over 40 kph on a foil is like 60 or 70 kph on the fin, false moves are exaggerated, and it turned me into a human skipping stone a few times. In saying all that, this only seems to happen now in the weird 3-way 'cross chop' from the Rottnest ferry and wind chop in the middle of the river. Uphauling in a storm is always difficult; the waves make it impossible to look cool, so I've given up on that, but the smaller sail is surprisingly easy to pull up, even when it's full of water. Water starts are hit and miss for me in high winds and the crazy swells; they take a lot of effort and fitness. This is where the 'questionable fitness' comes in. The ever-reliable starting at the top of the mast works well until it doesn't, and this is typically when you realise the wind has shifted and that was the reason why I'm in the drink to begin with. :-) As I've added this sail to my Patrik collection and reflect, everything feels so well thought through, in harmony, in control and exciting from the perspective of I know I can keep pushing and get more out of it. Flight time and speeds keep increasing, so does confidence and the fun. Cam rotation is great (once the spacers are out of the way), the top battens being adjustable against the mast are super easy to tweak but I haven't had to do much with them. I'm still tuning the sail with each session, each step closer to the 30 kts and eventually maybe a 40 kts goal..
Rigging and de-rigging.
Not much to say here, it's easy once the spacers are out of the way. Cams are hard to lock in with more than two spacers; much easier with one or none. Batten tension is with a supplied Allen key, and so far, I've only needed to give it half turns to tweak after the removal of spacers. The HA requires a lot of downhaul; it took me a few sessions to find the sweet zone. This range is about 2 - 5 cm from the recommended. Upper level for high wind days. I use the Camcleat Power Grip 2 rigging tool; it's quick and easy to carry while sailing, and I use the rigging up as part of a warm-up stretch. I like that the mast foot aligns perfectly with the tack pulley, and everything tucks away cleanly once rigged. On Patrik International's YouTube channel, Patrik explains the rigging process, and Nils Bach has a great insert on the downhaul rope




Fantastic report.
I appreciated its clarity, its punctuality, and its emotional impact.
No less fascinating is the part about the personal drama experienced along the journey through the learning curve. For many, that kind of feeling is the main reason they abandon windfoiling. For (a few) others, it's the only reason they feel alive!
Wow you are quite the writer, thanks for taking to time to give such a comprehensive gear review.
The gear you are on is arguably some best designed and fastest on the planet right now.
Would you be kind enough to delve into and share your the GPS data in your next instalment, this may help myself and others to take the leap of faith from less performance freeride foil gear that is more comfortable under 20kts.
Keep reminding yourself what Rick the cycling coach said.. ![]()
Thanks again.
Fantastic report.
I appreciated its clarity, its punctuality, and its emotional impact.
No less fascinating is the part about the personal drama experienced along the journey through the learning curve. For many, that kind of feeling is the main reason they abandon windfoiling. For (a few) others, it's the only reason they feel alive!
Thanks w100!
never thought I'd enjoy writing about my findings!
I think it's a learning journey anyone can do. So far, being ok to make mistakes (sailing and writing) is my key takeaway this year.
Well put, it's definitely a journey to feel more alive each time.
Wow you are quite the writer, thanks for taking to time to give such a comprehensive gear review.
The gear you are on is arguably some best designed and fastest on the planet right now.
Would you be kind enough to delve into and share your the GPS data in your next instalment, this may help myself and others to take the leap of faith from less performance freeride foil gear that is more comfortable under 20kts.
Keep reminding yourself what Rick the cycling coach said.. ![]()
Thanks again.
Thanks, Freeflight! good bedtime reading ![]()
100% and it looks like Patrik and team are in strong contention for Luderitz speed records this month.
Awesome, yes of course, I'm on the Waterspeed App, I've synced this to Strava and also just uploaded most of my sessions to Ka72.com. I'll make some time to push more through to GPS Speedsurfing.
I highly recommend the leap, it's also fun going back on the freeride or even fin gear to feel the nuances. It's sharpening up my foiling.
Hahaha, good ol Rick Lee the legend. Murray Hall was another great coach who changed my view on training. Both are always at the forefront of mind with their wisdom and motivation.
Welcome! I'll have a few more reviews in due course, still testing, practising, purchasing and learning. (Currently working on nailing all of my gybes, not just in the flat water areas)
Wow you are quite the writer, thanks for taking to time to give such a comprehensive gear review.
The gear you are on is arguably some best designed and fastest on the planet right now.
Would you be kind enough to delve into and share your the GPS data in your next instalment, this may help myself and others to take the leap of faith from less performance freeride foil gear that is more comfortable under 20kts.
Keep reminding yourself what Rick the cycling coach said.. ![]()
Thanks again.
Thanks, Freeflight! good bedtime reading ![]()
100% and it looks like Patrik and team are in strong contention for Luderitz speed records this month.
Awesome, yes of course, I'm on the Waterspeed App, I've synced this to Strava and also just uploaded most of my sessions to Ka72.com. I'll make some time to push more through to GPS Speedsurfing.
I highly recommend the leap, it's also fun going back on the freeride or even fin gear to feel the nuances. It's sharpening up my foiling.
Hahaha, good ol Rick Lee the legend. Murray Hall was another great coach who changed my view on training. Both are always at the forefront of mind with their wisdom and motivation.
Welcome! I'll have a few more reviews in due course, still testing, practising, purchasing and learning. (Currently working on nailing all of my gybes, not just in the flat water areas)
Great, always good to have some bedtime reading ![]()
Great review
and thanks for mentioning me![]()
Impressive That you go windfoil in such high winds. For me it has become more the light wind foiling that has my focus now with formula foil stuff. My smallest sail for foiling is now the 6,8 HA. It didn't help that I messed up my foot in a crash in June. Anyways Patrik freefall hook is on order as well as a 9,0 HA gen 2 and Ventores safety foot straps are on wish list for x mas. So maybe I get some confidence back to start foiling in highwinds again. spot on with HA requiring lots of downhaul, otherwise they push you down in the gust. Looking at your pictures I would think you go for a little more. But hard to tell from picture.
Kasper, There is a bunch of us free windfoiling in Australia, compact boards and wave(ish) sails who go out in pretty strong winds. I am in Melbourne and windfoil only now, have sailed in gusting to 40 knots but frankly anything over 30 knots becomes a fine line between pleasure and pain. 3.3 5 batten wave sail.... These are Aussie knots...not those pussy European knots![]()
Kasper, There is a bunch of us free windfoiling in Australia, compact boards and wave(ish) sails who go out in pretty strong winds. I am in Melbourne and windfoil only now, have sailed in gusting to 40 knots but frankly anything over 30 knots becomes a fine line between pleasure and pain. 3.3 5 batten wave sail.... These are Aussie knots...not those pussy European knots![]()
Haha![]()
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we tend to use meters pr. Second so we don't get scared by the big numbers ![]()
I could probably learn to foil in high winds but time is never on my side so have to focus what kind of windsurfing I wish to do. So my freestyle board haven't been used in some years now. And I maybe only get around 10-15 sessions on the waveboard a year. My main focus on the foil is the formulafoil for now as I can see a lot of improvement there and I love the fin slalom, and will test working together with a fin manufacturer as a tester. So slalomfoil has slipped a bit in the background. Also the kids have started to get better so I have to a lot of freeride in the swallow fjords with them. And they only want to go if there is medium to high wind. And then I have to run my daytime business with my brother and make videos for YouTube. So at the present moment no time to learn the high winds foiling stuff. But I love to look at it ![]()
Great review
and thanks for mentioning me![]()
Impressive That you go windfoil in such high winds. For me it has become more the light wind foiling that has my focus now with formula foil stuff. My smallest sail for foiling is now the 6,8 HA. It didn't help that I messed up my foot in a crash in June. Anyways Patrik freefall hook is on order as well as a 9,0 HA gen 2 and Ventores safety foot straps are on wish list for x mas. So maybe I get some confidence back to start foiling in highwinds again. spot on with HA requiring lots of downhaul, otherwise they push you down in the gust. Looking at your pictures I would think you go for a little more. But hard to tell from picture.
Welcome Kasker79, thank you for all your great videos and inspiration!
We're pretty lucky in Perth, the Swan river is incredible for sailing on. Worth a visit, hit us up when you want a winter get-away!
I have put in an order for the Patrik Feefall hook too, best thing for foiling, thankfully no major falls.
100% on the downhaul, I have been experimenting with this, and I find the sail becomes more stable and easier to use the more downhaul added.
Love ya work, keep sailing and stay warm! brrr that last Slalom fin video looks freezing!