VaderSurf.jpg
F(itz)or the Win!

VaderSurf.jpg
F(itz)or the Win!
Of course you're counting! Why wouldn't you? If I was building the heaviest board ever made, i'd want to know exactly how much it weighed too. And that WAS you dropping in on someone, video evidence doesn't lie. You should stay away from the water, you're a hazard. You can barely stand without falling all over yourself, you might want to change the orange jump suit and white crash helmet so that you don't stand out as much, that way you can deny any and all video evidence that supports your total lack of skill.
FakeRoy.jpg
Roy your board is not capable of being surfed on this wave. You know it and I know it and everyone here knows it.
BUT modern surfboards are able to maximize speed and direction. how is that possible... and your board can't surf a wave like this???
Of course it can, even SUPs can do it FFS.
By the way it is retarded to talk about 'my board' when I have dozens of different designs.
Sorry but I have an excellent safety record, almost never come off my board, have good skills, and didn't drop in. I caught the wave first AND had the inside position at the time.
You are clutching at straws trying to talk it down, it won't work.
The board in the video which you are commenting on weighs 24 pounds which is light for a board nearly 13 feet long.
Incorrect, since I was quoting what you wrote here, not what you were thinking... although it can presumably be deduced that some limited thought processes were responsible for what you wrote, mistaken though it is.
That is absolutely incorrect, all fins create lift whenever they are operating at an angle of attack, including singlefins, and the board you have been looking at has more than one fin anyway....
Your board does not generate lift. I can not with one fin.
That's so nonsensical that it isn't worthy of a reply.
Nor can you maximize leverage with your design. You are now trapped onto one spot on your board. it is clearly evident in your videos.
More nonsense... I could keep charging off down the line leaving the curl behind but choose to cut back and/or stall in order to get back closer to the curl.
This why your board losses so much speed when you make it to the shoulder or open face.
You couldn't be more wrong, I know exactly how they work and have written hundreds of thousands of clearly put together words on the subject.
I really dont think you understand exactly what your board is doing. I think you understand how to make them, they look like they are put together great. But as for the why your board surfs the way it does.... I think you're in the dark.
http://www.roystuart.biz
There's a reason why they look so different and it certainly isn't uninformed or random design, it's the result of many decades of experience plus deep thought and insight.
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Last edited by Roy Stuart; Feb 14, 2013 at 02:07 AM.
Roy your boards generate zero lift.
Roy your boards are not the best board for steep fast hollow waves
Roy your boards look ok for slow open faces
Roy your lost in your surfboard design.
The biggest mistakes are made by those convinced of their own supreme ability.
One day you will come to realize you could have continued learning and maybe making a better board.
That's a ludicrously incorrect statement, do you not understand that both the hull and the fins create lift?
This is true of all surfboards.
They ride hollow waves very well indeed.
Roy your boards are not the best board for steep fast hollow waves
They are excellent in all kinds of wave shapes and sizes, including the above.
Roy your boards look ok for slow open faces
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Roy your boards are not good for all types of waves.
Roy your single fin does not generate lift.
Roy your board is good for slower beginner type waves