by Raysn29 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 2:59 am
by Raysn29 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 3:34 am
by RinkyDink » Thu Feb 14, 2019 7:24 am
Raysn29 wrote:Surfing for about 7 months now, have insanely progressed the last 3 months on a 8'6 board. Have been going 4 times a week and a 3 weeks surf camp. Can go down the line and starting to do small turns.
i will keep surfing 8'6 for at least a few months to completely perfect everything before I buy a new board. I have been looking at some smaller boards however. Ive rented hardboards, but didnt enjoy the experience of a 9' longboard as much as I enjoyed a high volume 7'8 minimal when renting. We have mostly choppy windswell 3-5ft with maximum period 8 seconds in the North Sea (Netherlands) so I need volume.
by Raysn29 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 8:30 am
RinkyDink wrote:Raysn29 wrote:Surfing for about 7 months now, have insanely progressed the last 3 months on a 8'6 board. Have been going 4 times a week and a 3 weeks surf camp. Can go down the line and starting to do small turns.
i will keep surfing 8'6 for at least a few months to completely perfect everything before I buy a new board. I have been looking at some smaller boards however. Ive rented hardboards, but didnt enjoy the experience of a 9' longboard as much as I enjoyed a high volume 7'8 minimal when renting. We have mostly choppy windswell 3-5ft with maximum period 8 seconds in the North Sea (Netherlands) so I need volume.
Contrary to the dogma that dominates this forum, I think you got the right idea, especially since you've already tested the board out in the surf you want to use it in. Trust your own judgment when things feel right to you. If I were surfing in the North Sea and dealing with lots of windswell, I'd go for more volume as well as a shorter board length. Although I've never surfed there, I suspect a longboard might be too cumbersome in short period, peaky, choppy surf. I don't want to give you advice on particular boards because I don't have enough experience in those kinds of conditions or boards. Good luck.
by dtc » Thu Feb 14, 2019 9:19 am
RinkyDink wrote:Contrary to the dogma that dominates this forum, I think you got the right idea, especially since you've already tested the board out in the surf you want to use it in. T
by jaffa1949 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 1:09 pm
by Raysn29 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 1:40 pm
dtc wrote:RinkyDink wrote:Contrary to the dogma that dominates this forum, I think you got the right idea, especially since you've already tested the board out in the surf you want to use it in. T
I dont think anyone says anything against going from an 8'6 to a 7'4. Its when people want to start on a 6'4 or go 8'6 to 6'6 that comments are made
I would go with the walden, the curved outline actually helps to make it more manoeuvrable than the double wide. Sure its wider so not perfect, but on the waves in that video going rail to rail on a wide board wont be too hard, because the waves are fairly flat and mushy. the narrower nose will make paddling through the chop much much easier than a rounded nose.
Another option is the torq chanco - lower volume but I think you will be fine, the video waves arent tiny tiny; I've surfed waves like that fine on my shorter boards (6'10) and they are easy to catch. You just have to work a little harder on the face to keep the speed up
https://www.torq-surfboards.com/chancho.html
Alternatively, boards with big tails work really well in weaker waves. The fat/big tail lets the waves give a big push and good drive, but you have a relatively smaller nose to allow easier turning. The firewire dominator, for example, could be an option. Or a mccoy nugget type board
by jaffa1949 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 2:29 pm
by Raysn29 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 3:43 pm
jaffa1949 wrote:Dont get too messed up the 7'6" would be better, glide comes with length and curve, you are thinking in one dimension , perhaps two ( volume) things to consider, the board does not turn. Nor does it glide, these are things that you do, like using the gears in a car and steering .
The 7'6" will do everything you are currently capable of and what you will learn to do on it well into your future!
It is a board you can progress well on and take to better surfs. It is slightly wider but the profile of the shape is in my opinion a better board!
Just so I can answer more clearly , what do you think glide is and what gives a board glide?
Cheers for anyone learning in the North Sea
by Raysn29 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 5:00 pm
by jaffa1949 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 5:24 pm
by surferbee » Thu Feb 14, 2019 6:24 pm
by Raysn29 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 9:43 pm
surferbee wrote:Did I miss the part where you mentioned how much you weigh? It's a common mistake to over-volume boards (been there!). Volume doesn't necessarily translate to more glide or an easier time catching waves. On the contrary, it can even hinder your ability to catch waves. Think of an inflatable raft with LOTS of volume: it'll sit high in the water as the wind blows you around the surface and the waves roll under you, passing you by.
For example, I had 6'6" simmons that had about as much volume as my 8'0" performance longboard. The longboard had much more glide and caught waves a lot easier. By comparison, my 5'7" fish/groveller with at least 15L less volume also caught waves easier than the big simmons with more volume.
Volume calculators are notoriously problematic for all sorts of reasons. The GSI volume calculator, for example, shows me really high-volume boards (2x my current surfing volume on my daily driver!) probably because it assumes I want what they sell. Personally, I am yet to find a volume calculator that seems to account for all of the variables, including ability, age, weight, desired board type, surfing style, wave type, wetsuit or not, fitness, surfing frequency, etc.
All that to say, don't just base your decision on your perceived need for more volume based on riding that one high volume mini mal you rented. If that worked for you and you liked it, why not stick with it until you're ready for something else? You could probably even offer to buy it from the rental place.
by dtc » Thu Feb 14, 2019 10:13 pm
by Raysn29 » Thu Feb 14, 2019 10:27 pm
by Oldie » Thu Feb 14, 2019 11:55 pm
by RinkyDink » Fri Feb 15, 2019 12:20 am
Raysn29 wrote:waves start at 1:10 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_YrbVm_ ... gs=pl%2Cwn
The conditions are 50% of the time like this or steeper/messier, the other 50% very soft mushy waves good for longboarding. My reasoning was with a 7'4 shape and volume like that, i would be able to surf and practice in both conditions, and if the waves are really soft I can take out the 8'6. My medium to long turn goal is to make smooth carves just wide enough for those waves. Good idea overall?
Also the 7'4 is duckdivable when using the duck dive slice
by Raysn29 » Fri Feb 15, 2019 8:44 am
Oldie wrote:I would take neither.
I think 79l at 7.6 is IMHO overvolumed, too corky.
Waldens X2 finish is awesome, but SLX is light and not that durable
I don't think you need that much volume at your weight.
Look more at shape and rocker. In our our beloved windsell soup something with a slightly wider tail should help, I like the Cancho here more than the GSI boards.
And.. do you know that at the price you are willing to pay, you can get a EPS/Epoxy custom board build for you? If you call Bill Attlee at Escape Surfboards in Cornwall http://escapesurfboards.com/flying-carpet/66-7-10-flying-carpet-red-bottom-tint.html, he can advise you what you need and have it shipped to your door in less than two months.
by surferbee » Fri Feb 15, 2019 4:56 pm
Raysn29 wrote: Very usefull info, you really thought this through i see.
by Raysn29 » Fri Feb 15, 2019 6:09 pm
surferbee wrote:Raysn29 wrote: Very usefull info, you really thought this through i see.
LOL, is that a polite way of saying it was too long of a response to actually read? Ok let me try: Thank you for your intriguing follow-up question regarding corkiness, windswell, and volume. And thanks also for the opportunity to answer it for a second time with the exact same answer that I previously wrote. Are you asking for advice because you actually want it or because you've made up your mind that you "need" a new surfboard and you're looking for justification to buy it? You can spend your money any way you like, but tbh, you've only been surfing 7 months, and although you've "progressed insanely" to the point of "going down the line and doing small turns" (i.e., beginner surfing ), whatever board you pick is going to provide opportunity to grow, as others have said.
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