Fanatic allwave 9'1'' or8'11''

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fogo
fogo
NSW
6 posts
NSW, 6 posts
30 Nov 2014 5:29pm
Hi guys trying to make mind between these two boards some advise plaese
Craig66
Craig66
NSW
2466 posts
NSW, 2466 posts
30 Nov 2014 6:03pm
please let me start


size
weight
tall
age
experience
hair color
waves
paddle

??????????????????????????????????

PS I have 9.5 LTD allwave, love it, put quad fins today, love it more


bushman
bushman
WA
4 posts
WA, 4 posts
30 Nov 2014 7:34pm
fogo said..
Hi guys trying to make mind between these two boards some advise plaese


I have the 8'11 and im 90 kg and have no probs in the slop, but most of my weight is in the frontal pants area.
So there!
supthecreek
supthecreek
2768 posts
2768 posts
30 Nov 2014 11:56pm
I have owned a 9'10, a 9'6 and 8'10 Allwave.
As you drop in size, each one is geometrically better than the next size up.

I am 100 k and was very comfortable on the 2014 8'10 in chop or even full winter wetsuit. I do not have cat balance. They are easy and surf well.

I water swapped with a friend who wanted to try my 8'10. His 9'2 felt like an aircraft carrier to me after the 8'10.
Both the 9'1 and the 8'11 will paddle just fine.

Anyway... that's my experience on that.
CAUTION
CAUTION
WA
1097 posts
WA, 1097 posts
1 Dec 2014 2:31pm
i was in same dilema start of year, wanted smaller but shop talked me into the 9"1, im guessing mainly cos they had it in stock. after 2 weeks of riding it and sussing how to catch waves realised tooo big. too much volume and too fat a rail to be able to turn the thing when im only 85kg. anyhow it was good to learn with and my wife n kids like paddling it but i now ride something else as it was like trying to turn a boat.
i recon the 8"11 would have been a lot better, and still fine for wife n kids to play on in flat.
the new models look a lot thinner in rail to the 2014s, speak to a few and maybe see if you can demo.
That being said if you have fat long cruisy waves where you want to just cruise along face and do longer paddles etc 9"1 could be ok.
ActionSportsWA
ActionSportsWA
WA
1006 posts
WA, 1006 posts
1 Dec 2014 3:43pm
Hi fogo,

A lot of the answer you're seeking is in the details.

Most important details are :

Experience - The difference in size is massively affected by your skill. A skilled rider can ride a board thats volume is equal to the rider weight or even less. At 92 kilos I was able to paddle the new 7'11" and catch a wave where it was wicked, but would I choose to buy one for myself? Hell no! I like something a little easier so would choose an 8'11". Although I could ride a 7'11" or even an 8'5", the 8'11" gives me a paddling advantage and makes sure I get most of the waves I am paddling for. The surf is usually pretty crap where I surf so I foresake the performance of a smaller board for paddle and take off power.

Weight - Body weight determines how deep the board sits in the water and how east it is to get onto a wave as well as how it paddles in the flat water. At 92 kilos, I sit high and dry on a 9'5" but turning requires effort and skill, on the 7'11" I have most of the board under water which makes trim critical when balancing.

Fitness - If you are fit and dextrous, you can get away with a smaller board than if you're unfit or overweight. The width of the Allwaves makes balance pretty easy to get power down. If you are strong fit and have good balance, you can exert more power on take off making getting on the wave easier. Bigger boards where you float higher in the water means less effort in paddling.

Wave type - The Allwave is designed for mushy, full waves firstly and good waves secondly. A larger board will make catching a slower wave more possible. A steeper more critical wave will be better with a shorter board as the distance from balance point to tail pad and balance point to nose is closer meaning it's much easier to get the nose up and get onto the tail pad where the Allwaves come alive.

More info and we can offer more precise advice.

DM






LordKuz
LordKuz
NSW
260 posts
NSW, 260 posts
1 Dec 2014 7:14pm
The difference between the two... for someone around 80kg... is quite significant. The 9'1 is much like a long board, which is fine...but the 8'11 rips and really opens up your surfing. As others have said.... you might find the 8'11" a bit difficult at first...but the learning curve is quite steep and it wont take too long before you have it mastered...
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