Is it possible?

Discussion in 'Surfboards and Surfboard Design' started by vinnie1177, Aug 29, 2013.

  1. vinnie1177

    vinnie1177 Member

    9
    Aug 29, 2013
    Is it possible for me (85-90 pounds) be able to duck dive a board with a volume of 29.6?
     
  2. EmassSpicoli

    EmassSpicoli Well-Known Member

    Apr 16, 2013
    Tall task. I think there's 33.8oz or so in a liter (memorized that off a 1-liter bottle of soda as a kid, yes I'm a savants) so that's about 60-65 lbs of floatation. Considering the only things in your body that won't float are your muscles and some organs surrounded by muscles, the roughly 30L of board volume has got you covered by far. Im guessing you're a white female and your population has the lowest bone density so your bones may even float. Even with unreal technique, I'd think you'd be better off using a roll to get through waves.

    Depending on your location, there aren't likely any waves to duck dive through so you're at least set for a few more days of flatness during which the more knowledgeable board members can give you better answers!
     

  3. maddogg

    maddogg Well-Known Member

    173
    Aug 29, 2013
    yes. just get the nose under as much as you can.
     
  4. ClemsonSurf

    ClemsonSurf Well-Known Member

    Dec 10, 2007
    Technique is everything. A board's volume isn't distributed evenly throughout. If you have nearly 30 liters you can make a logical assumption that there isn't even 1/2 of that at the nose. Throw yourself up to the nose, do a handstand on it and it'll go under.
     
  5. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    ^^^ This, except i'd add that you should grab the rails up by the nose while doing the hand stand but stab the board into the bottom of the wave face with as much force as you can by extending your arms as far as you can as you do that hand stand, if you can, get a foot on the tail and push with your leg to get the tail of the board under the whitewater more too, nose first tail second, then hold on and come up paddling immediately to avoid losing too much ground. Timing is everything, make sure you get under the wave before it breaks on you.
     
    Last edited: Aug 30, 2013
  6. vinnie1177

    vinnie1177 Member

    9
    Aug 29, 2013
    Thanks for all the info guys!
     
  7. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
  8. N.F. Ee

    N.F. Ee Member

    7
    Feb 24, 2009
    Don't forget about the crucial second half of the maneuver. You really have to jam the tail down in order to pivot the board so the nose is pointing up. For a small person or a big board, this requires stomping with your foot and not just nudging with your knee. Once the nose is pointing up, you're golden because buoyancy does all the work after that. If you fail to pivot the board, buoyancy will work against you, and instead the tail will take the lead and try to shoot the board (and you) behind you.

    I can't speak from experience of whether physics will let someone so light pull this off but the only way to find out is to try and keep practicing.
     
  9. waterbaby

    waterbaby Well-Known Member

    Oct 1, 2012
    probably difficult, at least...but depends on the board. If it's a full on hpsb, the amount of foam in the chest/nose area is going to be minimal and, therefore, easier to push under. A fish/groveler is going to be the opposite.
     
  10. vinnie1177

    vinnie1177 Member

    9
    Aug 29, 2013
    It's more of a small wave board, i'll mostely be surfing 1-4 foot waves, then occasional 5 or 6. Those 4 to 6 foot waves screw me.
     
  11. Zman9398

    Zman9398 Well-Known Member

    341
    May 16, 2012
    I am 145 pounds and can duck dive my 7' 6" funboard and its 3" thick, it move of slicing the nose into the wave and basically standing on the tail once my nose is under
     
  12. soflo

    soflo Active Member

    36
    Mar 31, 2012
    its possible.. Bethany Hamilton has one arm and duckdives overhead waves all day. granted, it's a little different, but it shows you that if you're disciplined, committed, and practice, anything is possible.
     
  13. vinnie1177

    vinnie1177 Member

    9
    Aug 29, 2013
    Thanks guys, I got a board that is over 30 and can duck-dive it with ease.
     
    Last edited: Sep 1, 2013