Getting a New Midlength Board - Need Some Help!

Discussion in 'Surfboards and Surfboard Design' started by BlazersTimbers503, Apr 6, 2016.

  1. BlazersTimbers503

    BlazersTimbers503 New Member

    2
    Apr 6, 2016
    I'm in the market for a new midlength board. I've been riding my two longboards, a 10 footer and a 9 footer, for about two years now and I'd like to try a board in the 7' to 8' range. I'm 6'4" tall and about 205lbs. I've been looking at the Modern Love Child and the Firewire Addvance, but can't seem to decide which one to choose and which size to get. I had a 7'6" Santa Cruz Pumpkin Seed for a little while but ended up selling it because I couldn't get the hang of it - not sure if it had enough volume for my skill level (I'd say right now that I'm a crappy intermediate that goes surfing ~2 times per month). Basically, I really want to get better at turning and cutting back into the wave and I'm not sure which of these boards is the better one for that. I love the idea of the Love Child - longboard nose helps getting into the wave early, pulled in tail helps maneuverability. But the volume of the Addvance is also appealing. It looks like the 7'2" Addvance has more volume than the 7'6" Love Child. What do you guys think, any suggestions? I surf in Oregon in mainly smaller 2-7ft non-barreling waves.
     
  2. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    I'd go with a Fish or a Fish hybrid that has some volume to it
     

  3. Average Joe

    Average Joe Well-Known Member

    48
    Jun 18, 2014
    I love the poached egg that Hank Warner does. I have a 6'10 and 7'6, both ride great in a variety of conditions and allow for lots of speed and performance with still a lot of stability/forgiveness.
     
  4. garbanzobean

    garbanzobean Well-Known Member

    257
    Sep 15, 2010
    That's a thing you have to work out yourself. I know guys that are your size that ride big guy shorts under 6'6" and shred pretty hard. They know how to set the rail on a steep face and catch the wave with the back end of the board. You are not that heavy so you might want to consider a cue that is not to floaty so you can duck dive a bomb if you have to. Instead of asking SI why don't you ask a shaper instead of all these models you see on the web. Call Rusty and talk to one of the shapers (Rick Hamon? I think Rusty's son is a big guy that shapes also), not the dude in the store. Get in contact with a guy who actually designs and builds boards. Robert Weiner is a big old dude like yourself, he can relate. Probably a hundred old dudes in Santa Cruz, CA that can help. Fact is any board long or short will turn well, you just have to move around on the deck the bigger the are. That's why great log surfers walk the board to ride the whole wave. Seems to me where you are on the deck in relation to where you are on the wave is critical. Get a relationship with a shaper if you want to get better, one that has cues already there so you can put your hands on some of his work and talk to the guy who made them. Chris Christianson? Tim Bessell? One of those Hobie shapers? Good luck
     
    SquezDogNight likes this.
  5. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    ^^^ Best advise you'll get
     
  6. LBCrew

    LBCrew Well-Known Member

    Aug 12, 2009
    Excellent Choice.
     
  7. PA_KOOK

    PA_KOOK Well-Known Member

    434
    Apr 4, 2016
    If I were in your circumstances I'd pick up something used off of CL instead of going custom. You already bailed on a shorter board once because you couldn't get the hang of it, why sink money into a custom, or new board for that matter? The Modern Love Child has a sh*t ton of volume and, like the bean said, you're not that heavy. It may be a bit too much if you are trying to focus on maneuverability.

    What's the fin setups on your current boards? Singles or w/sidebites?
     
  8. LBCrew

    LBCrew Well-Known Member

    Aug 12, 2009
    I built a knock-off for a local guy... EPS/epoxy with 6oz all around... thruster/quad convertible. He rides it in everything, too. Did a shallow single to deep double concave bottom too... deep, but not Bonzer deep. But I'm convinced those doubles are why it works in OH surf. He rode it as a quad first, but never rode a quad before, so he didn't like it and went back to riding it only as a thruster. Said it went too fast!
     
  9. antoine

    antoine Well-Known Member

    Mar 10, 2013
    I got nothing for ya in the srf bort arena but how about some medical advise?
     
  10. Barry Cuda

    Barry Cuda Guest

    The best advice I can give you is to take NO advice from this board of morons.
    You would be better off going to Kenya and asking Africans what the meaning of life is.
     
  11. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Ah c'mon, we all know this topic is right up your alley, you dig mid lengths do you not?
     
  12. Barry Cuda

    Barry Cuda Guest

    At his size , he needs an aircraft carrier, not a mid length.
    The USS Midway may be for sale. Call San Diego.
     
  13. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    HAHAHA Now that's a suggestion
     
  14. BassMon2

    BassMon2 Well-Known Member

    Jan 27, 2015
    Some good advice here. Talking to a shaper and/or getting used and cheap...I agree with both. But I'll offer some advice that wasn't mentioned. Now, don't get offended. I'm not bashing or nothing. But while a smaller board may help, it won't be the key that gets you doing cutbacks and what not. I'd suggest getting the technique down on the 9er you already own. Learning your turns on a LB will most deffinitly help you out in the long run. When you have the skill, THEN get a smaller board to to match and improve that skill.
     
  15. BlazersTimbers503

    BlazersTimbers503 New Member

    2
    Apr 6, 2016
    Both my longboards are running singles with sidebites