SQUARE TAIL
This tail can take the thrusters fin set up to its full potential,
with a straighter template line through the back of the board,
giving you drive. More area in the tail gives you buoyancy under
the back foot and area giving lift release of the tail, good for
small waves – fast and snappy.
ROUNDED SQUARE
This tail works under the same principal as the square tail.
When you round the sharp corner of the square tail off slightly
it makes the board looser with more curve in the rail and more
positive.
PIN TAIL
If you have a pin that is narrow in the tail (12’ to 13)
your surfing (turns) will be drawn out and powerful. These dimensions
are most commonly found in guns and semi-guns because you can
hold the board in the face of the wave.
With a wider tail (13’ to 14+) they’ve more area
under the back foot and more curve in the template making the
board extra buoyant in the water, looser and easy to turn. They
are more suited for smaller conditions.
ROUNDED PIN
This tail works under the same principal as the pin tail, with
more volume and curve in the tail this board is good for small
surf, the more curve the looser it gets.
SWALLOW
Most retro and fish boards have swallows, as a square would be
too slidy with a wide tail. The swallow has the hold of a pin
and the drive-release of a square. It’s down to personal
preference some people like them and some don’t. You will
find swallow tails in all ranges of boards.
RAILS AND DECK THICKNESS
Rail and deck volume is mostly down to a surfer’s body
weight. For your standard shortboard if a surfer were 10 stone
he would have around 2.75 inch, 11-12 stone 2-3/8 inch, 12-14
stone 2.5 inch and so on. If the rail is too thin the board will
not release quickly enough. If the rail is too fat the board will
feel too corky. You must find a good medium between resisting
too much or burying too deeply into the wave. The centre thickness
and deck contour dictate the end result of the rail, but you can
cheat by having a flat deck and boxy rails or a thick deck with
thinned down rails depending on the waves you’re surfing
i.e. slow or fast, sucky or weak.
BOARD TEMPLATE OUTLINE
The outline (template) consists of 3 measurements, the width
12 inches down from the nose, the widest point (centre) and 12
inches up from the tail. Join these together and the measurements
dictate the outline.
BOTTOM CURVE (ROCKER)
The rocker is one of the most important design features in a
surfboard and will dictate what you do on the face of the wave.
We have tried and tested rocker lines but are always trying new
combinations, best left to shapers in most cases.
BOTTOM SHAPE (CONCAVES)
Choice of bottom shapes to choose from:
Flat entry with vee in tail, fun boards, long boards etc.
Single to double concave.
Double concave.
Reverse vee double concave
And more…
Concaves became popular in shortboard design when surfing got
faster and more radical. The need for speed and manoeuvrability
led to banana rockers and huge concaves and then came back to
a level. Everything evened out and smooth flowing lines are the
go to this day. Concave is good and gives the board lift and a
bit of a turbo boost, but maybe not too much and definitely in
the right place.