The types of surfboards
The most common types of surfboards
Surfboards are constantly evolving, and there are multiple board designs for a broad range of environments. Discover the most popular types of surfboards.
The world offers an infinite spectrum of waves, and that is why there is a wide range of surfboard designs, templates, and shapes.
Today, brands and craftsmen develop anything you can think of.
You'll find retro surfboards, hybrid models, high-performance boards, vintage logs, and big wave surfing machines.
As in almost everything in surfing, different shapes result in various surfing experiences.
However, modern surfboard shaping works around seven main templates: shortboards, longboards, fish boards, malibu/funboards, guns, tow-in boards, and stand-up paddleboards.
Only then come the elements of the surfboard design: outline, length, width, nose shape, tail shape, thickness, rocker, bottom curves, rails, fin setup, and volume.
The Shortboard
The shortboard is the classic surfboard born out of the so-called shortboard revolution, when Bob McTavish, Nat Young, and Dick Brewer radically transformed the 9'6'' longboards into 6'6'' surfboards.
Shortboards are the most popular surfboard template in the world right now.
If you visit a popular surfing beach, you'll find out that 95 percent of the surfers are riding boards between 5'5'' and 6'5''.
A shortboard can be difficult to paddle, but it is easier to duck dive than a longboard.
Shortboards are also easier to turn and will respond quickly in critical moments and sections of the wave.
The most common fin setup used in shortboards is the thruster (tri-fin) system.
The Longboard
The first surfboard of the modern era was a longboard. As the name suggests, longboards are long surfboards.
Longboards are typically over 9', feature a rounded or blunt nose, plenty of forward width, and wide tails.
Longboards have a lot of foam volume and are highly buoyant. As a result, they're easy to paddle and will enter any wave quickly.
The longboard is the perfect craft for small surf because they plane very well in sloppy summer waves.
Longboards are quite stable and can be ridden on the nose, but they're difficult and slow to turn.
However, they reflect a tradition, a style, and a statement in the history of surfing.
The Fish
Fish surfboards are similar to shortboards, but they tend to be wider from nose to tail and smaller in length.
Because of their width and low rocker, they plane better and generate a lot of speed in small-to-medium waves.
The fish model was designed by Steve Lis, a kneeboarder from San Diego, in 1967.
These small and fast surfboards also feature a fish-inspired tail and are frequently ridden with a twin-fin setup.
One of the most popular fish models is the 1980 Retro Twin Fin by Mark Richards, a magic contest surfboard that helped the Australian win four world titles between 1979 and 1983.
The Malibu/Funboard
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