pmcaero wrote:The surf skateboard is an OK simulation tool if you already know what you are supposed to do on a surfboard.
The surf skateboard is a GREAT ( if not the best I found to teach my students ) simulation tool. It is to help replicate and reinforce what you do in the water. It might not teach you how to cutback, but teach you how to make the cutbacks you have, more smoother and powerful.
pmcaero wrote: a beginner can get it and quickly acquire bad habits if using it as a teaching tool. Only someone intermediate can get any benefit from it.
Again you blame the arrow. You say buying a surf skate taught you bad habits. Can you explain what bad habits you picked up riding surf skate ( I almost put Carver, but I forgot you don't own one ) ?? I know you said it doesn't teach you to step back. That's not it's fault. A basic rule is your back foot should be over the fin(s) to turn, when you're not turning you don't need to be over the fin(s). Riding a Carver is about carving and turning, it's not really fun going straight and actually a bit wobbly to input. It wants to be on Rail. So yes, if you can't do a basic cutback and you can't get the lean angles with the proper body line, I agree with you that it's not for beginners. Look at you videos and see how straight up and down your body line is. How stiff your arm movements are. Now look at this Smoothstar video.
( yeah, I know what you're going to say, " but that's a shortboarder, I want to turn on my longboard". Again the mechanics of turning a shortboard or a longboard is the same. Timing, pressure, and where on the wave changes but the basic body movements and flowing from rail to rail stays the same. ) You keep saying "Front foot", "front weighting" blah blah, look at the slow motion shots and how the rider weights and un-weights his whole body, twist his upper body before the legs, rolls from heel to toes. STOP focusing only on one aspect.
pmcaero wrote: Only someone intermediate can get any benefit from it.
Almost every person on this forum who actually owns a Carver, has benefited from using it. Agreed, I wouldn't teach someone on Carver until they start to do turn downs and turn outs on their surfboard. Maybe beginner-intermediate can't do a nice bottom turn yet, but after a few hours/days on a Carver, I guarantee they will do them better, faster and with more confidence ( which leads to a better 2nd turn ) First things first. I agree with you that maybe you're not ready to be on a surf skate just yet.