Ghost size comparison

23 days ago
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obijohn
obijohn
153 posts
153 posts
17 May 2026 10:02am
For the past year, I have been loving my 8'10"Ghost which I bought at age 74 to replace my beloved 8'8" SP25, which a few years ago replaced my beloved 8'7" Flow V1. As I get older with more injuries and replacement parts, I find that I like to add a little volume every few years to keep the wave count and enjoyment level up. On the really wonky days on the 8'10" Ghost with big chop and cross-rollers, I sometimes have to give up when friends my age on bigger boards are able to hang in there. That motivated me to buy a 9'1" Ghost just to be able to stay out longer on those wonky days. After a couple of weeks of comparisons, here are the differences I have found between those two sizes of the Ghost, none of which are very surprising.
1. The 8'10 is a faster paddler due to being narrower. The width of the 9'1" pushes more water which slows it down and makes paddling more work. When riding a non-breaking roller into the beach, the 9'1" will drop off the plane sooner when it starts to slow down and push more water. 2. When in wonky water conditions, the 8'10" requires a lot of leg twitches and paddle action when standing still, when the 9'1" feels stable as a dock which means it accomplishes my goal of getting it to stay out longer on wonky days. 3. Both are excellent wave catchers, even on the tiniest one foot waves. More similar than I expected. 4. Once planing, the 9'1" is faster and more fun on knee high waves due to the wider tail providing more sustained speed while staying back on the tail for maneuvers. The 8'10" is faster and a lot more reactive on waist high or bigger waves which makes it a lot more fun in that size and up. 5. In chest high or bigger, the 8'10" handles later drops a lot better. The 9'1" prefers to catch waves earlier which it is good at. 6. Both boards will crank impressive bottom turns, but the 8'10" feels quicker and snappier. Cutbacks on the 9'1" feel sluggish compared to the quick response of the 8'10". The 8'10" generates a lot more speed from pumping down the line. 7. The biggest surprise was going out through whitewater or pitching waves. For this, I prefer boards with narrower noses that will punch through the wave rather than wanting to climb sharply up and over. The SP25 was great at this because of the very pointy nose. The 8'10" does a decent job of punching through, but the 9'1" lurches up and over everything which throws me off the board going out over whitewater or pitching waves that would be no problem on my other boards (the 9'1" is the biggest boards I have ever owned.)
The bottom line is that my new 9'1" is now my preferred board for knee-high surf or wonky conditions. The 8'10" wins in all other situations due to much quicker and more reactive performance on the wave, and faster/easier paddling speed. As I said, no big surprises (other than the problem with paddling the 9'1" out through whitewater or pitching waves which woud probably be less of an issue if I had more weight to hold the board from flying up in the air.)
obijohn
obijohn
153 posts
153 posts
18 May 2026 3:33am
Brief update. As I thought about it last night, I decided to try some different fins on the 9'1". I have been very happy with the quad set I have on the 8'10" which is 4.75" fronts with 3.75" rears, all of which I modified to reduce the rake and tip area to loosen things up. Since I have liked those so much on the 8'10" and my previous SP25, I modified a second set to match and put them on the 9'1".
This morning I decided to see if a more powerful set of fronts would help to pull the larger board through tighter and more powerful turns. I put on the standard Sunova 94 fronts that came with the board, which are 5" with a long raked tip which always felt like too much fin on my other boards. I kept the tiny rear fins on. The larger front fins with a ton more rake worked like magic this morning on the 9'1". The board that yesterday felt stiff and sluggish on the cutbacks was now powering 180 degree roundhouses right back into the pocket. Everything about the board felt way better from turning response to pumping speed down the line. My wife commented on the day-and-night difference in performance from yesterday, and said it looked like I was surfing one of my shorter boards.
It never ceases to amaze me how much different fins on different boards can radically change the performance.
Tardy
Tardy
5354 posts
5354 posts
18 May 2026 2:42pm
good run down John .I have a 8,7 & 8'8 .SPX .both 133 litres .I like the narrowness of the 8'7 better .and it sometimes feels more stable .
One of my liked boards was the 9,1 Acid .no nose type board .it was 30,5/8 wide .I didn't have trouble standing on it and it paddled amazing .Big wave count on that board .
enjoy the Ride 🔥
supthecreek
supthecreek
2765 posts
2765 posts
18 May 2026 10:21pm
Love all the detailed feedback on your Ghost John, thank you!

I ride all my Ghosts and Ghost Up's with 6" Twins as front sides and 3.6" center (4.5" in more juice)

Because my hamstrings are always subject to pulling or tearing, I gave up putting the nose over a wave when paddling out.
I simply ride up the face that is hiding under the foam and simply pop through the back as I rise up the face.
Now I only do this on smaller waves or soft waves, but it works very well and doesn't set me back much as I pass the wave.

The pic below is a very small wave, but it shows the nose slipping under the foam and popping out the back





London
London
SA
72 posts
SA, 72 posts
6 Jun 2026 11:09am
Hi obiJohn.

Can you tell me how much you weigh ?


I currently ride. 9’”3 smik hipster twin 153 litres and I’m about 98kg in wetsuit. Intermediate skill, surf about 2x a month in 1-3 fairly mushy surf.

thinking of moving to ghost and trying to decide if to go 9’1 which is 150
litres. Or to go with 9’3 ghost ?
any advice ?
obijohn
obijohn
153 posts
153 posts
6 Jun 2026 1:59pm
Hi London, I am not sure how much relevant advice I can offer since I only weigh 75 kg. My stability issues relate to being 75 years-old, multiple joint replacements, multiple concussions, and double vision due to a shattered eye socket from a surfing injury in Costa Rica.
I get to surf about 15 days a month in waist to head-high+ surf. Big wind chop or a lot of cross-rollers mess with my balance and ability to get back to my feet which motivated me to get a bigger board for rougher conditions. Since I love the Ghost so much, I just added the next size up.
My 8'10" Ghost is my favorite board from the dozen+ boards I have owned or ridden. My new 9'1" gives me just enough extra stability to handle more wind chop when I need to. I would guess you would experience a similar relationship between the 9'1" and the 9'3". If you are looking for more performance in good quality surf, I think I would encourage you to go with the 9'1". If you are looking to just enjoy yourself in 1-3' mushy surf, the 9'3" might make that easier.
For more and better advice on which size Ghost to get, I would suggest contacting Rick Weeks (supthecreek) on Seabreeze. He is closer to your weight, and helped design the Ghosts and owns many sizes. He loves to do deep dives in helping people figure out what board might be the best fit for them. I think Rick gives better "real world" advice compared to younger stronger surfers who seem to always advise smaller boards than many people should own.
Happy surfing.
ToneJ
ToneJ
22 posts
22 posts
6 Jun 2026 6:44pm
London said..
Hi obiJohn.

Can you tell me how much you weigh ?


I currently ride. 9’”3 smik hipster twin 153 litres and I’m about 98kg in wetsuit. Intermediate skill, surf about 2x a month in 1-3 fairly mushy surf.

thinking of moving to ghost and trying to decide if to go 9’1 which is 150
litres. Or to go with 9’3 ghost ?
any advice ?

Hi London


I have a 9’1 Ghost. I’m 90kgs and 6’3. I find it very stable, I can paddle out almost without getting my hair wet even through waist high white water. I guess I would ask why are you looking at the ghost ?
I have a 9’ flow which I love and I have a SB longboard 10x31. The SB is a great board but I find it a lot to handle in choppy and windy conditions so got the ghost hoping to use it in any conditions.
not had the ghost for too long but so far it’s doing what I wanted it to do. It took me a few sessions to get use to it but it’s a very easy board to surf.
supthecreek
supthecreek
2765 posts
2765 posts
7 Jun 2026 4:23am
London said..
Hi obiJohn.

Can you tell me how much you weigh ?


I currently ride. 9’”3 smik hipster twin 153 litres and I’m about 98kg in wetsuit. Intermediate skill, surf about 2x a month in 1-3 fairly mushy surf.

thinking of moving to ghost and trying to decide if to go 9’1 which is 150
litres. Or to go with 9’3 ghost ?
any advice ?


Hi London

We talked a while ago, so I have all your stats.
My question would be, are you more comfortable now on your Hipster Twin, or still having issues in chop?

If you are comfortable and you want to drop down in size, the 9'1 Ghost has good volume and widths for an intermediate SUPster.
If you are looking for more stability a that you can turn from the middle, then I would go 9'3 Ghost.

All these boards have good stability and volume.
Comfort is relative..... some people never like to fall over, then there's me,,, I fall all the time but it doesn't bother me, so I ride the 8'5 Ghost and 8'8 Ghost at 78 years old. The more time I spend on a board, the less I fall because our bodies adapt quite quickly to increased demand.

Please ask any specific questions or issues you would like to discuss.

Peace
Rick Weeks






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