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Does it matter what kind of tail on your surfboards???

PostPosted: Tue Feb 28, 2006 3:04 am
by baldie
I have a squash tail fun board 7'0. My friend advised me that this board can't handle waves more than 6 foot high (Hawaiian scale) or waves in the North Shore, Oahu, Hawaii because of its squash tail. He said I need to have a round pintail board for bigger waves. Is that true??? What is your comment???

PostPosted: Tue Feb 28, 2006 10:26 am
by drowningbitbybit
Well, it probably can handle bigger surf, but it might not be the best for it :?

Tail design is one of the fundamentals of the board which will control how it surfs, as important as the rails or the rocker.

This site describes it nicely...

www.safarisurfco.com/content/view/21/44/

(the pictures of the tails are on page 1, but the descriptions are on page 2) :roll:

:D

PostPosted: Tue Feb 28, 2006 9:30 pm
by trails surfing
from my vast knowledge from surfing 5 whole months :lol: , no realy from what i have read a pin tail will funnul the water to the point of your tail giving it more stability in larger surf. the swallow tail gives a larger surface area for greater push in small mushy waves. and umm.... cant remember the rest sorry :oops:

PostPosted: Tue Feb 28, 2006 9:45 pm
by baldie
Thanks drowningbitbybit for the great website. It was very helpful. Anybody else knows anything about surfboard tails??? Like can I use a squash tail board for big waves??? Or a pin tail for small waves??? Do they really matter???

PostPosted: Wed Mar 01, 2006 2:45 pm
by Driftingalong
You can use what ever you want.
But, tails are designed for specific purposes and will make difference.
(Every single aspect of the board's design makes a difference whether you are experienced enough to notice or not.)

You would probably experience more difficulty on a squash tail in big waves staying balaced and driving down the line staying ahead of the the crashing wave.
And, you would probably stuggle turning a pintail fast enough in small surf.

In otherwords you would get more enjoyment out of the waves you are surfing when you are using the proper equipment.

PostPosted: Wed Mar 01, 2006 5:50 pm
by Brent
Squash tails are a nice compromise; basically a good way to squeeze some volume back there and have a board that pivots on the turns. They work well. The faster you go the less tail & surface area you need...otherwise you'll skate on the wave rather than surf partially in it. Narrower tails are more stable at speed, turn gracefully and work in bigger surf. A nice compromise is a round-pin.