Shortboard shopping

Get advice on the best surfboard for your needs. Tailored advice from knowledgeable surfers and surfboard shapers.

Shortboard shopping

Postby Belladaeberick » Tue Oct 13, 2020 5:56 pm

Okay so I’m buying my first shortboard soon. I’ve been on my fish for awhile. I’m 5’0 and 115 lbs. I want something 5’6 or below and 25 liters or more, but I don’t want a groveler. Something I can use 2-8 ft range. Thruster. Anyone have a suggestion on what board I should look at? Or am I being too picky?
Belladaeberick
New Member
 
Posts: 5
Likes: 0 post
Liked in: 0 post
Joined: Fri Aug 07, 2020 1:03 am

Re: Shortboard shopping

Postby jaffa1949 » Thu Oct 15, 2020 9:26 am

I think you are not getting answers for this yet, because when I read between the lines you have only basic skills down the line on your 6’10’’.
when you can lift your skills with a stronger set of turns on your current board then start to step down in sizes.
But to assure yourself see if you can borrow a board of similar type and volume to what you want.
Being 16 you maybe flexible enough to go that way easily
:lol:
I've taken up troll hunting just for fun, instead of a rifle I'll just use a pun! 冲浪爷爷
User avatar
jaffa1949
Surfing Legend
 
Posts: 8179
Likes: 0 post
Liked in: 0 post
Joined: Thu Jul 08, 2010 12:01 am
Location: The super secret point breaks of Ober Österreich ( how many will notice the change)

Re: Shortboard shopping

Postby alex_k » Fri Oct 16, 2020 8:51 pm

Generally speaking, wider in the nose is better for paddling and wave catching, narrower nose is easier to keep out of the water in steeper or more dangerous drops. Wider in the tail gives you more push from the wave and thus more speed, especially on a shortboard where your back foot is way back a lot of the time.

Width overall gives you stability. For numbers, 22" is wide, 21 is medium narrow, 20 is really narrow. And 19, well, if you can surf a board that is that narrow you don't need surfboard advice because you're already ripping and know your own preferences.

Length gives you glide. Suit your own preferences here, but unless you're really really really not getting that rotation on your turns as fast as your body pushes, more length and glide is helpful to many intermediates.

Lower rocker in the nose gives you quicker paddling, lower rocker in the tail gives you trim speed when on the wave. For someone in the vast realm of intermediate, that generally means you want low rocker throughout.

You're quite light so you can go lower on thickness, and may want to to get responsiveness and that feeling of being able to dig into the water in a turn. Talk to your local shop or shaper on this to get the numbers right though.

To summarize, wider and a little longer with lower rocker is the easiest short board to ride. You may wish to consider a board that is short but not a "short board." These go by various names like hybrid, stubby, or the smaller, thinner end of egg or midlength, but the thing relevant to your question is that they're wider and lower rocker but still short. A "high performance short board" is going to be narrower and more rocker than a "daily driver" short board is narrower than one of these hybrid/fun/stubby/whatever short models. Stephanie Gilmore talks about her enjoyment of this type of board here:



As far as specific models, ask your local shop! There's a huge variation in what boards work well in local waves. If your area is longboard centric, you'll need a lot more board -- length and volume -- to get waves. If you're surfing an all-shortboard break with a nice push to the wave, you can maybe get away with less. Also consider asking other teenagers of similar abilities in your area. (Don't trust the super rippers, they will tell you to get too much rocker and too small a board.) Also, if you buy used, you can usually sell for similar amounts if you get a good deal to begin with, even after a full season if you don't get a bunch of dings.

Good luck!
alex_k
Grom
 
Posts: 42
Likes: 0 post
Liked in: 0 post
Joined: Fri Nov 16, 2018 4:29 am

Re: Shortboard shopping

Postby Lebowski » Sun Oct 18, 2020 10:42 am

alex_k wrote:Width overall gives you stability. For numbers, 22" is wide, 21 is medium narrow, 20 is really narrow. And 19, well, if you can surf a board that is that narrow you don't need surfboard advice because you're already ripping and know your own preferences.



Generally decent advice given, although I'd say your numbers above are a bit generous for a shortboard. My own personal scale is more like:

22" - Super wide, grovellor only at 5'6" or below, not a good all round (short) board unless you're built like a powerlifter
21" - Good for a big guy. Very wide for a 115lb whippet
20" - Nice shortboard width for me at 175lb ish. I personally like a shortboard around 6'6 x 20 x 2.5 ish. Still wide for a grom but depends on skill level. Could be ok
19" - Probably ok
18" - Probably a bit narrow unless you're a decent surfer
17" - Pee wee shredders only
Lebowski
Local Hero
 
Posts: 409
Likes: 0 post
Liked in: 0 post
Joined: Sun May 13, 2012 9:21 am

Re: Shortboard shopping

Postby alex_k » Mon Oct 19, 2020 7:27 pm

Agreed, the widths I listed are very, very generous, going past short board widths into stubby type widths, but that’s probably good for a someone who’s never ridden a short board.

Belladaeberick, perhaps a way to gauge widths is what is the most narrow board you are riding now? Don’t go down too too much from that for a first go at short boarding.
alex_k
Grom
 
Posts: 42
Likes: 0 post
Liked in: 0 post
Joined: Fri Nov 16, 2018 4:29 am


Similar topics

Return to Surfboard Advice