Any feed back on the 2024 starboard longboard sups,, IMO they definitely look the goods,all the things I personally disliked about the old model seemed to have been addressed,and improved,and the new size 9.5x30 124 liters,are very friendly numbers,on paper ,love some feedback on this model in particular.
Hi justadd,
I have surfed the 2024 9'5". I found it to be pretty brilliant. First, it is crazy fast on the nose. I am a life long short boarder, years of pumping and driving and gouging and hacking, and all I wanted to do was set this board up and run to the front. It made me want to ride to the end of every wave and then trim into the reform and ride that to shore and then lay in the shallows and laugh. It also turned really well with that wide point back and the low volume rails. Like any board you can crank it around tighter from the very tail, but I also didn't have any problems getting it to make softer turns from further forward. I thought it was easy to surf and forgiving. The nose is pretty straight, but there is enough tail rocker so if you are coming down with the whitewater all you have to do is weight your back foot to stay out of trouble. In spite of the flat rocker I wouldn't say it paddles on the flat any faster than other longboard sups I have ridden. Strangely(and this doesn't really make sense) it seems to glide freakishly well. As I have mentioned I would guess the wide point is a couple inches back of center. The rails are very low volume. It has a very subtle double concave that runs the length of the board until about the center of the fin box where it fades into a flat tail. The concaves are very shallow throughout and in the nose the center vee is just marginally higher than the rails. In the middle of the board it is higher, but still very slight, maybe 1/4". The deck is domed a bit which I really like. I rode it in small waves, mostly shoulder high. I am 6'2" 185#s
if you have specific questions let me know and I will do my best to answer them.
Thanks surly great review,,is it a carbon, or limited ? Curious about the weight ,the comment about glide is very encouraging,as I hope they paddle better than my heavily rocker current board.
FYI my 2019 Starboard Longboard 10ft pinetech is 9.8kg with fins attached.
Pretty good for a 10ft board.
It is the carbon construction. I have a friend with an accurate scale and I will try to get you a weight in the next few days. I don't mean to sell it short as a paddler, but I think the wide point back makes it feel a little less linear than other longboards I have paddled.
xurf xup thanks for your response,for me 9.8 is getting towards heavy,my current 10x30 125 liter board is 8.3 kg and I'm trying to at least not go over that
It is the carbon construction. I have a friend with an accurate scale and I will try to get you a weight in the next few days. I don't mean to sell it short as a paddler, but I think the wide point back makes it feel a little less linear than other longboards I have paddled.
Surly, the website guesstimates 7.7 kg+or -5%, but it's the real world number I'm after ,I had the previous model 10 ft in carbon and it was heavy! Thanks in advance to yourself and your friend for your time and effort
Justadd,
no problem. Weighing a board is pretty straightforward, I just want to make sure I get you info from an accurate scale. I am guessing it will be close to your limit. I had a 122ltr New Deal that felt crazy light and yet it was 7.8 kg when I weighed it. I am pretty sure this board is heavier than that new deal. I am like you in that I really like a light board, but I have to admit the fastest paddling longboard sup I ever had was my first one: a first gen fanatic stylemaster 10x30. That thing weighed almost 10kg and had a ton of tail rocker but it paddled like a demon. You could seriously hunt down anything. Of course it surfed a bit like an aircraft carrier but I did have a lot of fun on it.
Surly,I've been on just about every commercial longboard available in oz ,,as they are my preferred ride,the best paddler for me was the 10x29 new deal,but it felt stiff no matter how I finned it!,so what I'm thinking is it maybe more about volume,as my age70+ with really bad shoulders,so the dilemma continues ,the balance between volume..rocker and length,hence the thoughts of the new starby 9.5x30 as it appears to paddle onto and catch waves very easily in vids,which is what I'm looking for ,yeah I'm not Beau and I'm probably 30 years older ,but the board appears to glide into the waves with little effort,and your comments seem to reflect this.
Justadd, board came in a hair under 8.2kg. Not terrible, but not as nice on your shoulders as 7.7.
Surly,thanks heaps,that's about what I guessed,and its an ok weight very similar to my current ride,I hope you continue to enjoy the board,and have a safe holiday period with waves
I had the previous model 10 ft in carbon and it was heavy! Thanks in advance to yourself and your friend for your time and effort
Be careful, there seems to be two carbon constructions for Starboard, the "blue carbon" is not sandwich unless explicitly mentioned, hence the weight I guess.
sup.star-board.com/hard-paddle-board-constructions/blue-carbon-construction/
sup.star-board.com/hard-paddle-board-constructions/blue-carbon-sandwich-construction/
Correct Colas,no pvc sandwich in the surf sups ! IMO not a true sandwich construction ,and a little misleading saying carbon with a layer of fibre glass is sandwich construction,they are obviously being made price point using the big word carbon! I personally I would love starboard to go back to the golden era of pvc carbon sandwich from around 2013-2014 ,but would be quite expensive.
Correct Colas,no pvc sandwich in the surf sups !
Actually, you have PVC sandwich in the ... "blue carbon PVC sandwich" line (but this seems only available for 2024 boards?).
I guess the local importer / distributor may choose to only carry the non-sandwich line if he thinks it would be too expensive for his market.