Jester wrote:Yikes!! Tried the 7'4 in very small waves today.. Could barely sit on the thing!! Paddling is good though, that's one plus.. Pop up was horrible and would take a LOT of learning to get used to!! Seriously back to beginner level. Having said that they were tiny tiny waves! Not so sure about the 7'2 at the mo dtc, unless its just something you get used to?! Wish the waves had been bigger to assess it properly. Was like Bambi on ice today.
Small waves are not great for shorter (even if mid length) boards - I don't know the physics, but they are much less stable than longboards in those conditions. I suspect its because they don't go as fast and have shorter rails, so don't get 'sucked into' the wave to create the stable platform you need. Up to (say) thigh or waist high, LBs are still better (if waves are under knee high I pretty much cant even catch them with my mini mal). But once you get to waist high and especially a bit bigger, the mid lengths show their benefits. So give things a go with slightly bigger waves.
Its possible that your pop up isn't quite perfect and whatever you are doing wrong is shown up with the shorter board (for example, you are a bit slow or pushing the board away from you or something). A bit LB might hide it - it may only be a minor thing. Or it might just be the wave.
If you are comfortable on an 8ft4, I think you can drop a foot in length. Obviously length is not everything - outline, rocker, construction material etc are very important. But if you are thinking of a Torq 7ft6, then the 7ft2 will be exactly the same in respect of those points and hence the only variable is length
However, don't go 7ft2 just because I said so! There is absolutely no problem going 7ft6 and surfing that for a year or 3 or 10; if you then decide you want to go shorter you can drop to a 7ft or 6f10 and have a fine range of boards for most conditions. There is no magic about that 4 inches (unless you have a short car).
The second board is the hardest to buy. The first board is easy - a longboard. The third board is a refinement of the second - a few inches shorter or a different nose or whatever.
However, the second is the one that is the biggest change - the 1ft or more drop in length, the move from LB shape to something narrower or more rockered or whatever. Its a hard decision - I ended up going to a shaper (well, used my indecision to give myself a birthday present of a shaped board). I was surfing a 9ft1 and he was trying to convince me to get a 7ft2; I insisted I wanted a 7ft6 or longer - a 2ft drop was very stressful to thing about! We compromised on a 7ft4 with some additional tail rocker. And ....he was right. After my first surf I knew I could have gone shorter (I'm sure it helped that I was buying a wide thick board - I wouldn't drop 2ft to a big boy shortboard).
Nonetheless, those few inches I can't imagine would have made much difference - or any difference probably at my level. You agonise about it, but whatever you buy will be a good board that will be suitable for many years.
Now years later I still surf this board and, if I want to go shorter, have a 6ft10 to use (haven't surfed my longboard for about 5 years, sad to say...). Whether you get a 7ft6 or a 7ft2 I suspect you will go the same way - surf it and enjoy it; and then pick up a slightly shorter board in a few years.