Sunday, July 05, 2009

So you want to make a surfboard? Post 3

Do the end results of shaping your own board need to be perfect? Definitely not.

As a matter of fact they can be full of lumps and bumps but will still ride fine. The glass job doesn’t need to be perfect either. As long as a lamination is water tight your are good to go. Air in the glass job, dirt, miscellaneous imperfections are only cosmetic. Now days you can take your shaped blank to a lam shop get it glassed and by pass the glassing part altogether.

The most common problems that I’ve seen in home made boards shape wise is in rocker curves. Some to flat, usually because the foam blank is acquired from stripping the glass off of an old board. Some with to much rocker… maybe getting a blank that was glued up with to much curve to begin with or placing the outline on the blank to far forward.

But the end results not being the best usually doesn’t hurt how the board works for you. It may ride even better than something you’ve been riding that was made commercially. Why is that?

There are most likely a number of reasons…

Your stoke level is high because you’ve made you own board.

Because your stoke level is high the imperfects don’t bother you.

Because you’ve made your own board you want it to work for you.

Because you want it to work you try to figure it out.

If you find hang ups with the board you’re still stoked because you made the board.

The reason why you’re still stoked is because you’ve bought boards that had hang-ups.

You reason that because you’ve bought boards that had hang-ups it’s no big deal that the board you made has hang-ups so you continue to try and figure the board you made out. Finally, you’ve figured out what the hang ups are and the way to fix the hang ups is to make another board modified to what you think will solve the hang up problems .

Then the whole cycle starts over again. Welcome to my world forty seven years ago. And notice that most of this is psychological, because surfing is mostly a mental game.

D.R.

Photo by David Puu

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