Gorgo said...Bnaccas said...
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I'm pretty sure when we all talk about light weight SUP's we are talking about performance surf SUP's and warranty should be similar to surfboards.
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"Lightweight" would be applicable to performance SUPs and in that context I think all bets are off. Performance SUPs should be built so they give best performance for the market they are aimed at. If lightweight and strength are incompatible then that's the price you pay for chasing performance etc.
I am more interested in "lighter" SUPs in moderate performance and allround boards. The aim is lighter boards to make SUP more fun and easier to do.
I'm big and pretty fit and I find it tedious to lug a big fat SUP around, to have to find parking a short walk from the beach, and to get the board back to the car after a big session. I just want a stable, reasonable performance board that's no heavier than 10kg and costs no more than $2000.
This is the feeling I am getting from most of you guys. That light weight SUP (dropping from 12kg to 8kg - not 8kg to 6kg) equals slightly improved performance on the wave (it doesn't detract from it). DJ's link on weight (for longboards) confirmed this. It would seem the 10kg+ production SUPs are a combination of affordable construction techniques for appropriate strength.
Is a light board less strong? - from the sounds of it a light board can be weak or strong, it depends on the construction technique and materials which is where the expense is at.
I feel, having ridden a brand new production SUP and having it repaired twice for breakage across the nose (this was not deemed a warranty issue

) that a heavy board simply for strength isn't a factor, it is just heavy due to the construction to make a cheaper board.
I am now considering a better made board and wouldn't mind it lighter as Gorgo points out. Nothing extreme - just something that is less than 10kg ....so I don't get a hernia!

. SUPs aren't cheap as we know - but if a light board with affordable construction techniques is going to last as long as heavier board, it feels right for me.
Thanks for the great expert input - it is an interesting variable.
cheers