by icetime » Mon Jul 04, 2016 9:44 pm
by waikikikichan » Wed Jul 06, 2016 12:23 am
icetime wrote:What are your guys favourite surfboard shapers/manufacturers and why?
I'm talking about the all in one type, good quality, good price, not trendy expensive al merrick type boards.
by oldmansurfer » Thu Jul 07, 2016 5:34 pm
by icetime » Thu Jul 07, 2016 11:38 pm
waikikikichan wrote:icetime wrote:What are your guys favourite surfboard shapers/manufacturers and why?
I'm talking about the all in one type, good quality, good price, not trendy expensive al merrick type boards.
#1 All in one type. You mean a board that can do it all in all conditions and wave sizes. Something that easy to catch and turn. No such thing
#2 Good quality. What is good quality ? Doesn't crack and delam the first day ? A lot of the so called "custom" boards are made in little more than a garage, with chemicals fumes and dust vented out into the air ( neighbors ). While the look down upon pop-outs are made in ISO 9001 standard manufacturing certified factories. I seen factories with no solid floors, the dust falls thru the grated floor into collectors. The walls are water falls and collect the dust also.
#3 Good Price. How much would you pay for a good burger ? Price is relative.
Who's your favorite shaper ? My shaper. The one I built up a relationship with. The person I have actually have history and multiple boards with. There are shapers I want to try like Ryan Burch and Meyerhoffer, but I only know of them thru the magazines and internet.
Question - What's a all around, good quality, good price Golf club ? Bicycle ? Ink pen ? Dining table ?
Question - If water is gushing out the sink everywhere, will the $dollar store screwdriver next to you not suffice ? Or will you tell the wife to run out to the garage and only get your Snap-On brand screwdriver ?
by saltydog » Fri Jul 08, 2016 4:32 am
by icetime » Fri Jul 08, 2016 1:55 pm
saltydog wrote:My favorite shaper is a local guy. H'e been shaping for ages and has a great reputation for his shaping skills in a variety of boards. He is known to be a great guy both inside and outside of his shaping room. And he works with clients with a wide range of skill levels so I feel pretty good about going to him when I'm ready for a new longboard in a year or less depending on how fast I can fill up my piggy bank. I actually have 2 used longboards that he has shaped so I have some idea of what I'm getting like shapes and glass jobs he outsources. I'd say his boards are priced in the mid range, neither boutique expensive nor backyard cheap.
Technically speaking, being in So Cal I can walk into any number of worldly known shapers' showrooms and pick up a stock board or even order a custom there. But I doubt I can make the kind of connection I would establish with lesser known local masters. Surfboards are a rather unique hobby equipment that even an average joe can get a handmade custom made one at a reasonable price. I can't think of any other sports like that.![]()
by waikikikichan » Sat Jul 09, 2016 12:16 am
icetime wrote:. What I meant by all in one type is the company/shaper not the surfboard.
Someone you get the most bang for your buck.
by saltydog » Sun Jul 10, 2016 8:39 am
icetime wrote:Too bad the shaper community is small here in Morocco, only one shaping company that's local and it's half way across the country so my only option is buying mass produced popouts boards at the surf shop, plus they're expensive as hell!
by Big H » Sun Jul 10, 2016 1:17 pm
by icetime » Sun Jul 10, 2016 11:34 pm
Big H wrote:Ice,
I have a handmade board from a local shaper, a few machine milled and hand finished boards from locals that suit local conditions, and some mass produced boards.....whether they were popped out or not I don't know or care......some surf sites really play up the local shaper angle and poo all over boards made from larger manufacturers..........I don't; there is quality and garbage out there on all fronts. The boards I have suit me, my surfing, size, weight, ability and the waves I choose to use them on. In these beginning stages of your development the board isn't going to make much difference as long as it fits you, your ability and where you are going to use it.
by Big H » Mon Jul 11, 2016 2:31 am
icetime wrote:Big H wrote:Ice,
I have a handmade board from a local shaper, a few machine milled and hand finished boards from locals that suit local conditions, and some mass produced boards.....whether they were popped out or not I don't know or care......some surf sites really play up the local shaper angle and poo all over boards made from larger manufacturers..........I don't; there is quality and garbage out there on all fronts. The boards I have suit me, my surfing, size, weight, ability and the waves I choose to use them on. In these beginning stages of your development the board isn't going to make much difference as long as it fits you, your ability and where you are going to use it.
I see your point, I kinda screwed up when buying my first board, I bought a size of a big surfer so basically there's like 11 inches more than I want which makes me struggle when riding waves, paddling is easy but once you're on the wave the extra size is harder to move around, I'll learn to live with it for a year, as I said I'm still a beginner in a way so I'm probably wrong![]()
by icetime » Mon Jul 11, 2016 12:48 pm
Big H wrote:icetime wrote:Big H wrote:Ice,
I have a handmade board from a local shaper, a few machine milled and hand finished boards from locals that suit local conditions, and some mass produced boards.....whether they were popped out or not I don't know or care......some surf sites really play up the local shaper angle and poo all over boards made from larger manufacturers..........I don't; there is quality and garbage out there on all fronts. The boards I have suit me, my surfing, size, weight, ability and the waves I choose to use them on. In these beginning stages of your development the board isn't going to make much difference as long as it fits you, your ability and where you are going to use it.
I see your point, I kinda screwed up when buying my first board, I bought a size of a big surfer so basically there's like 11 inches more than I want which makes me struggle when riding waves, paddling is easy but once you're on the wave the extra size is harder to move around, I'll learn to live with it for a year, as I said I'm still a beginner in a way so I'm probably wrong![]()
You're saying your first board should have been a 5'7"?
by icetime » Mon Jul 11, 2016 1:07 pm
by drowningbitbybit » Mon Jul 11, 2016 9:29 pm
icetime wrote:... basically there's like 11 inches more than I want which makes me struggle when riding waves, paddling is easy but once you're on the wave the extra size is harder to move around
by icetime » Mon Jul 11, 2016 10:09 pm
drowningbitbybit wrote:icetime wrote:... basically there's like 11 inches more than I want which makes me struggle when riding waves, paddling is easy but once you're on the wave the extra size is harder to move around
It's not the board that means it doesn't turn very well. You don't need a shorter board, you need to learn to surf that one properly.
by waikikikichan » Mon Jul 11, 2016 10:13 pm
by waikikikichan » Mon Jul 11, 2016 10:23 pm
icetime wrote:Yeah where I'm getting at is positioning on that board, I'm constantly moving up and back on the deck compared to with a shorter board your frontfoot wouldn't move as much but you'd be shifting your weight instead of walking up a board
by icetime » Tue Jul 12, 2016 12:09 am
waikikikichan wrote:Nice board. Seems fine to me. Board looks easy to turn. BUT something seems wrong with the fins. Could you post a photo of the fin setup ?
by saltydog » Tue Jul 12, 2016 11:59 pm
by waikikikichan » Wed Jul 13, 2016 7:01 am
icetime wrote:Also my front foot toes are pointed towards the rail.
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