What a blast! Goya and Quatro most favorite freewave board again!!
Yeah! Stoked!

If you need to compare the test result of the other boards I'll be happy to post them.
Ciao
Alberto
From Board Mag :
Angulo SuperGu 92
Exocet Cross II 94
F2 Spice 86
Fanatic Hawk 93
Goya One 85
JP Freestyle Wave 85
Mistral Syncro Pro 92
Naish Freeride Slalom 95
Quatro Freestyle Wave 85
RRD Freestyle Wave 86
Starboard Kombat 87
Tabou 3S 87 Ltd
GOYA ONE 85Successor to the Goya Freewave, the “One, Aqua Series 85” is the
middle size in a three board range that’s billed as delivering early
planing, good riding, freestyle and powerful blasting.
On the water: The One 85 is very much a moderate
waveboard design, with a fairly wide nose suggesting a slight leaning
towards smaller waves and freestyle. The tail is easily the narrowest
on test, the length at 231.5cm easily the shortest, and the max
planing width easily the narrowest. The planing flat is also the
shortest with a 141.2cm point but the tail rocker is relatively
moderate at only 4mm.
Not surprisingly then, it was clearly a strong favourite in the
waves, and just as clearly the slowest to get planing in marginal 5.7m
weather. Much less predictable was the really balanced feel and
sensible volume distribution that made it feel much more
comfortable and less twitchy or specialised than ‘big waveboards’
can often be guilty of.
It sits quite low in the water and has a secure, manageable nature
rather than feeling fast and flighty, but it blasts and rides chop
comfortably. It’s happy enough in flat water and keen to perform
stronger wind freestyle but comes into its own in swell – or, better
still, waves. It’s a great jumping and riding board, agile, easy,
predictable and controllable.
Range: It will take up to a 5.8m, but its ideal sail range is 4.7-
5.5m and its ideal water state is coastal so there is clear overlap with
smaller waveboards. It can handle almost any (stronger)
windstrength or water conditions if required.
Fittings: A very sensibly sized and decently performing MFC
25cm fin. The deck is nicely padded and domed. Straps are comfy
and easy to adjust, but don’t easily go either very big or very small
and the top velcro strap is flimsy.
Popularity: One of the top three performers for nearly all the
guest testers, and very popular with the testers too. Although this is
partly attributable to the fairly windy test conditions which so suited
to its nature, it’s also clearly merited.
Overall: A board that can fulfil many roles, but its strengths are
definitely biassed towards coastal conditions or high wind freestyle,
and towards reasonably well-powered sailing. Accessible enough to
be considered a ‘high wind board’ for late intermediate to advanced
sailors, yet it can equally be considered as an ideal lighter wind (but
very much wave-oriented) complement to a small waveboard for
advanced to expert sailors. A very classy feel and highly
recommendable for manoeuvre / freestyle / jumping style sailing in
medium winds (c. Force 5).
HIGHLY RECOMMENDEDFast Waveboard (with great all-round capabilities)
QUATRO FREESTYLE WAVE 85New to the UK but not to the world at large, the three-board Quatro
Freestyle Wave range sits between their better-known Wave designs
and a three-board Freemove range. The 85 is the middle board of the
range, which spans 75-95L.
On the water:The bigger, quicker and more lively of the two
very wave-biassed boards in this line-up. It planes up clearly a bit
later than the average of those on test, but still much earlier than an
equivalent sized waveboard. Nevertheless, its strengths are
principally geared to coastal waters. It was clearly more
manoeuvrable and controllable in the waves than the less wavebiassed
designs, particularly with sails below 5.7m. It rides waves
and jumps impeccably, giving a lively, nippy feel rather than supersmooth
or loose.
In flatter water it sits high and has quite a skittery feel. While
clearly designed for more of a wave than slalom / freeride stance, the
deck is comfortable enough to make the board fun for blasting
around over flat water or swell, and – as our GPS results showed –
definitely nippy. The narrowish nose and tail aren’t ideal for freestyle
but the board still performs OK in this arena too.
Range: Very happy with up to 5.8m as long as you’re not trying
to milk every tiniest puff out of marginal wind situations, and wavy
and controllable enough to be a smallest board for average weight
coastal sailors.
Fittings: The straps are comfortable and adjust easily through a
smallish range. The deck is comfortable and the 25cm MFC
Powerbox fin suits the board very well.
Popularity: This board won more top places in the guester
favourite lists than any other and fared very well with the testers too.
Not often found lonely on the beach!
Overall: A really sensible combination of manoeuvrability and
get-up-and-go for a small medium-wind coastal all-rounder. It isn’t
quite a fast-tail, so it does sacrifice a bit of performance in the
marginal winds, but as a partner to a bigger board for taking care of
those iffy jumping / riding days, it’s a very high performing,
comfortable and classy board.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDEDFast Waveboard (with great all-round capabilities)