- Location
- Oceanside, CA
well come to ventura holmes.
thread de-railed!
thread de-railed!
well come to ventura holmes.
thread de-railed!
heavier the better imo...usually when my ski goes below half tank i come in to fuel it back up to get some more weight back in the nose..when your ski is too light it gets deflected by the lip when u are doing a reentry or going off the top...bottom line is the best wave riding thats ever been done and is being done currently is on superjets..nobody is even coming close to having their stock superjet hull hold them back...until u are riding your old ski to its full potential then i dont see why the average guy is spending 8gs on a hull that dosnt even work as good as the one they had..you can ride strait down the line before the wave is breaking on a 550...what really shows how a ski works is when u are hitting the lip when its overhead and hollow which unfortunately not many people are doing..
i dont like riding where #1 u are riding next to where guys are surfing and #2 u have to hold back cause if u sink its a 3mile tow back..ill take little inside reforms at pismo anyday
Exactly.... Great description.
One thing not mentioned yet is that when you land from "altitude", the lightweight hull will stop quick on the surface, then sink. Giving you more of a "impact" than a heavy hull that will just penetrate the water easier,especially when landing "flat".
Lighter boat= Much more fun in smaller surf...
Light weight inbred , Weight and hull shape can keep the ski planted . I think hull shape is the main ingredient but I haven't charged massive surf on a ski yet but have shaped hundreds of windsurfers , surfboards and a few skis.
The way taylor rides his xfs in the surf is misleading, that boat is a handful!!
I think the way Taylor rides ANY ski is flat-out misleading. :notworthy:
I've chased the lightweight hulls for years, owned some, and ridden a LOT of them. In my endless quest to get something that is truly an all round hull, I realized that the only thing wrong with the oem hull is the SMC bottom deck.
We need WEIGHT! To make a ski carve, you need weight! So, I guess you need to decide what you want to do with a particular ski, because there is not a single ski on the market at this stage that has everything. You either have light weight, which handles flat and offshore/smooth surf well (with the exception of carving) or a heavy hull that carves like all hell, but feels heavy as lead when you're trying to impress the ladies at your local lake.
Over the past five years, I've ridden a lot of aftermarket lightweight hulls, owned a few, and I am now back on my oem Superjet hull that I bought brand new back in 98 (been through 3 owners since!). I've had more fun in the last 6 months on this ski than what I have in the previous 5 years throwing money at the latest and greatest.
The bottom line is that I spent all this time trying to find something that I had from the start...a ski that's strong enough to take a beating, and handles any conditions I can throw it at. After reinforcing, my first ski, I swore I'd never do it again, so bought an XFT. Since then, I'd always admired the guys still rocking stock hulls. They were carving up anything they could get to, and I was bobbing and sliding over the top of waves, looking like a hack!
I think it's what you get used to, and sometimes you don't know what you're missing out on by not trying another hull, or putting at least 3 or 4 rides on it.