Star sup boards

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akhawk
akhawk
WA
1085 posts
WA, 1085 posts
5 Mar 2008 9:22am
Has anyone heard of or know anything about star sup boards?
Star surf is a local surf shop here in WA that is selling these boards, and I was wondering if anyone knew much about them?
cheers.
HEADSHARK
HEADSHARK
WA
5 posts
WA, 5 posts
5 Mar 2008 3:39pm
GDAY,
I ride the 10ft fish. Goes real good in waves. Quite easy to turn and easy to handle. Can still go for long paddles on it but probaly not as fast as the bigger ones. They also have a 11ft board which i've been told is also good. And a 12ft which would be great for long paddles.
akhawk
akhawk
WA
1085 posts
WA, 1085 posts
5 Mar 2008 4:12pm
Would the 12 foot be ok for taking out in summer type surf around perth or would the 11 foot be better?
HEADSHARK
HEADSHARK
WA
5 posts
WA, 5 posts
5 Mar 2008 5:33pm
I would go for the 11ft. Its going to be easier to turn. Are you just starting out or have you been doing it for a while?
Just went for a paddle then. No waves but glassy and crystal clear.
akhawk
akhawk
WA
1085 posts
WA, 1085 posts
5 Mar 2008 5:37pm
I've never tried it before. I'm a windsurfer and bad surfer wanting something to be able to get out in any conditions and get wet. I would mainly be in small surf but am also after something for the rest of the family to have a go paddling around in flat water.
HEADSHARK
HEADSHARK
WA
5 posts
WA, 5 posts
5 Mar 2008 5:44pm
I reckon the 11ft would cover all things you want to do on it.
Should be stable enough for everyone to learn on. Its quite easy to get the hang of. Good luck let me know what you get and what its like.
akhawk
akhawk
WA
1085 posts
WA, 1085 posts
5 Mar 2008 5:58pm
Thanks for the advice. I've just got to convince my wife its as much for her as it is for me!
Greenroom
Greenroom
WA
7608 posts
WA, 7608 posts
5 Mar 2008 7:01pm
Hey Hawk, I just got your pm.
Im not sure of the StarSurf Board? Who makes them? Where do they come from?
Looks like Headshark knows more about them than me as he has one.
I reckon the 11' would be the go but make sure its at least 30" wide.
Just ask Miller how stable his 11'6 Naish is in the surf. He thought it would be super stable but its not. Even my 11'2 of 30" I fall off all the time in the surf. Still getting use to it.
Just do it Hawk! Get one! Its worth the bread. And the kids love it
akhawk
akhawk
WA
1085 posts
WA, 1085 posts
5 Mar 2008 9:27pm
I got some measurements for the star boards. The 11 foot is apparently 28 inches wide and the 12 foot is about 29 inches. I don't know if that inch or 2 will make much difference. There is also an 11' 6" Jimmy Lewis ex demo board available to consider but this is a little more expensive.

Greeny, Do you still think the mast track is worth the extra? Do you sail on yours often enough to make it worth while getting. Mate, you are also persuasive. I might have to get you to have a chat with my wife and talk her around as well.
Thanks fellas
Greenroom
Greenroom
WA
7608 posts
WA, 7608 posts
5 Mar 2008 11:37pm
I personally think that 2" will make a difference in stability. You imagine 5cm more on your surfboard? Thats alot IMO. 29" would be the absolute less Id go but thats because Im still a kook. Flat water paddling is easy but when you get into the waves its a totally different sport! Plus putting your kids on the nose of the board you also need more stability. My Starboard 11'2 is 190L in volume! And thats nothing compared to the Naish 11'6 which I think is about the 230L?
Um mast track was important for me firstly because I windsurf and didnt want to spend big bucks on just a paddle board. Also when the kids want to learn windsurfing I can put a kids rig on it. Obviously its not gonna be a hardcore DTL wave board. Just ask Miller. He had his Naish out in some big waves.
For me its an option to put my 5.7m on it and flog around in 10-15 knots.
Its versatility is cool.
For instance I wanted to go for a paddle late this arvo around 7pm. I drove between Trigg and Hillarys looking for a wave but the wind was also abit too much for my liking. Southerly about 5-10 knots. Although I was dying for a wave I just had to get out and paddle so I just went to the marina and paddled around for an hour on pure glass water. Magic and relaxing. Plus a good workout
Hope my rambling helped make your decision easier
akhawk
akhawk
WA
1085 posts
WA, 1085 posts
5 Mar 2008 11:41pm
Cheers. I'll keep looking around. Do you think the length makes much difference ie 11 foot versus 12 foot?
Greenroom
Greenroom
WA
7608 posts
WA, 7608 posts
5 Mar 2008 11:53pm
Yes. The longer you go Im guessing the more waves you will catch. Kinda like a shortboard verses a longboard. The longer the board the easier to get waves. but then you gotta think about what you wanna do on the wave and how big the wave is and what type of wave it is and how it breaks?
I got mine for fat rolling waves that are no bigger than head highish?
But once on the wave Id like to do some turns and a 12' board could possibly be too long for turns and cutbacks etc but not impossible. Plus a 12' board you could more than likely out grow? I dont know? Im just new to this sport and going by what I feel the sport has to offer me. Hope that helps? Just dont go too big or too small. You want to catch any wave with the least amount of effort
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