stevenb wrote:You are completely right and I agree 100%. But, with the right equipment things are more fun. And as I'm surrounded by mountains, I'm looking for the most suitable equipment to get the most out of the days I can spend in the sea.
stevenb wrote:I can catch waves, go down the line and do bottom turns, but I'm far away from cutbacks. However, I want to learn how to do some decent turns with my next board, as I'm having a hard time turning the eleven.
What you WANT to hear - Go with the Pyzel Phantom 5'10". John John is a 2-time world champion and if it good enough for him it should definitely make you rip.
What you NEED to hear - ( and please take this as constructive critisim and that I want you to improve and progress. But sadly most will get their feelings and aspirations hurt not accepting the truth and runaway from our advices )
The boards you have are plenty fine for cutbacks. Are they buckled ? No. Is a fin box ripped out ? No. You want a "more maneuverable surfboard". Think about what you are saying, you want things to be "easier". Nope, when the time comes when it is too easy to turn your current board and you start overpowering the rail / fins, THEN it is time to move down in size.
If you can't drive a Formula 3 car, will getting a Formula 1 car ( which of course is faster ) make YOU faster. No, you probably just crash harder.
( I can guarantee I can get around a race track faster in my family van faster than I could trying to drive an F1. Hell, I wouldn't be able to get it out of pit lane without stalling it or crashing into the barrier )
If you can't contact the bat with the soft ball, why are you making things harder by putting the setting on "fast pitch" ?
All the boards you listed have no potential on their own, they need the riders input to go. You already said you don't have a good cutback, but getting a more high performance ( more maneuverable ) board means you need even more quicker reflexes and more technique. ( and these boards are less forgiving if you don't get things just right ).
If you live in the mountains and don't get to the beach much often, then get a board that allows you to catch more waves. If you move down to a 5'8", you will be catching less waves. My advice is to stick with the 6'0" "eleven brand" board, put on normal FRP fins ( thruster not quad ) and learn the basics on how to turn a surfboard. Once you start "destroying, tearing up and maximizing what you can do on it, then it will be time to think about another board.