Forums > Stand Up Paddle Foiling

Foil board volume

Reply
Created by Youngbreezy > 9 months ago, 21 Oct 2019
Youngbreezy
WA, 938 posts
21 Oct 2019 10:58PM
Thumbs Up

I am wondering what are people's thoughts in relation to volume for sups or prone are most just sticking roughly to the volume they would on a normal board or have people started to go down or up a bit?

From what I hear prone riders are adding on a decent chunk of volume as it helps with easy paddling and doesn't make too much difference once your up.

What about with sups? Does a bit of extra volume make the board a bit too corky or does the foil help to counteract that? I imagine a bit more volume would add a little paddle speed and if your board is less sunk down in the water surely it would be easier to pop up onto the foil.

A lot of the latest shapes both prone and sup are packing as much volume into as short a length as possible. Obviously the main reason is that it means all sizes riders can get their shortest possible board but are the designers finding that a little more volume is generally helpful. Interesting to see blue planet has released the carver with the 6'2" having 142L!

I am currently on 125L (I weigh around 100-105kg) this is roughly the same volume as I would use in a surf sup and is quite comfortable. I think for my next board I might actually go up to 130l as this is an easy volume for me but not so much that it is corky

gbrungra
11 posts
30 Oct 2019 12:47AM
Thumbs Up

Only 2 reasons to go with less volume:
1. Duck diving (prone)
2. Less swing weight once up on foil

If chasing small waves, could give up the ability to duck dive in exchange for more volume, so easier to catch waves.

From what I've seen with SUPs, people go with a little less volume, because the foil adds some stability.

Seems like everyone is headed in the direction of thicker boards. Get the volume you need to catch waves, but with shorter lengths for easier pumping once up on foil.

gbrungra
11 posts
30 Oct 2019 1:48PM
Thumbs Up

Anyone tried pumping an inflatable SUPfoil board?

F-One makes them (though I hear they have tuttle box fitment issues?)
Manta makes them:
110liters (low end for SUPfoil, but
160cmx70cmx12cm (5'3"x28"x5")
6kg (sounds heavy?)

They also make a 72liter (for prone or very lightweight SUP rider)
and a 170liter (too big for pumping?)

hilly
TAS, 7195 posts
30 Oct 2019 5:05PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
gbrungra said..
Anyone tried pumping an inflatable SUPfoil board?



So many jokes come to mind

6kg is light for a sup foil board.


Select to expand quote
gbrungra said..
From what I've seen with SUPs, people go with a little less volume, because the foil adds some stability.


The length would have a bigger negative effect on how well you can pump.

frenchfoiler
498 posts
30 Oct 2019 4:07PM
Thumbs Up

For prone I use the same volume (32L) as I use on regular surfboard but on a board that way shorter (surfoil 4'2 vs surf 5'5).

For SUP I mostly use it for DW so I added more volume to have the buoancy effect and to handle the choppy water. I can ride 90L on a classic SUP but on my SUP foil I'm at 5'5 x 26 - 100L (thick rails, recess deck, wide outline). Super light and strong : 4kg

Volume will not add much weight but lenght will do.

Construction is also very important. My board is full carbone with reinforcement (sandwich construction) on the deck (feet area) and in the fin box area. Better connection and transmission.





Youngbreezy
WA, 938 posts
30 Oct 2019 7:24PM
Thumbs Up

That is a super cool board french foiler!! And 4kg is crazy light!!

Thanks for the replies everyone, as I would expect people will have various different opinions on volume.

The shape of sup foil boards and the big keel of the foil adds a lot of stability so one could go to a lower volume than with a conventional board, but the main thing I am wondering is there really any advantage to dropping volume? my thinking is that keeping a generous volume would add a bit of paddle power and help to pop the board up on the foil, all things being equal

mattllew
70 posts
30 Oct 2019 8:45PM
Thumbs Up

I'd be careful with dropping volume too much if you're going really shorrt.... and as you say there's not really any point performance wise. What I have learned is that there is obviously less surface area/surface tension in a 5'10x26 than there is with a 7'6 regular SUP. My 5'10 actually sits lower in the water at 98 litres than the 7'6 with 89 litres. I'll be going north of a 100 litres with my next 5'5.

Defo agree with you on the stability though. There is a lot of lateral stability from the foil. Because I still (occasionally) regular sup surf on small ish boards I deliberately go narrow with SUP foil boards. I would quickly lose the balance required to stand on a small sup (without a foil) otherwise.

Hdip
384 posts
30 Oct 2019 11:52PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
gbrungra said..
Anyone tried pumping an inflatable SUPfoil board?

F-One makes them (though I hear they have tuttle box fitment issues?)
Manta makes them:
110liters (low end for SUPfoil, but
160cmx70cmx12cm (5'3"x28"x5")
6kg (sounds heavy?)

They also make a 72liter (for prone or very lightweight SUP rider)
and a 170liter (too big for pumping?)


Steamroller rides the manta. Pretty sure he has videos of it on his Instagram somewhere too.
www.instagram.com/p/B10XhWGnnLk/?igshid=1647ztmud8mnw

MLB007
39 posts
31 Oct 2019 10:59PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
gbrungra said..
Anyone tried pumping an inflatable SUPfoil board?

F-One makes them (though I hear they have tuttle box fitment issues?)
Manta makes them:
110liters (low end for SUPfoil, but
160cmx70cmx12cm (5'3"x28"x5")
6kg (sounds heavy?)

They also make a 72liter (for prone or very lightweight SUP rider)
and a 170liter (too big for pumping?)



I can't imagine an inflatable stiff enough to be able to pump on without the energy being taken up by flex. I'd also wonder about the strength of the foil mount. I have a 20psi red paddle co board with battens that is very stiff, but I don't think it's "that" stiff. But being a lot shorter should be a lot stiffer too, right??

gbrungra
11 posts
1 Nov 2019 2:50AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
MLB007 said..

gbrungra said..
Anyone tried pumping an inflatable SUPfoil board?

F-One makes them (though I hear they have tuttle box fitment issues?)
Manta makes them:
110liters (low end for SUPfoil, but
160cmx70cmx12cm (5'3"x28"x5")
6kg (sounds heavy?)

They also make a 72liter (for prone or very lightweight SUP rider)
and a 170liter (too big for pumping?)




I can't imagine an inflatable stiff enough to be able to pump on without the energy being taken up by flex. I'd also wonder about the strength of the foil mount. I have a 20psi red paddle co board with battens that is very stiff, but I don't think it's "that" stiff. But being a lot shorter should be a lot stiffer too, right??


Yes, shorter should mean stiffer.

Also, the Manta boards specify 30psi, which would also help.

Seajuice
NSW, 907 posts
1 Nov 2019 9:51AM
Thumbs Up

My view. Seriously depends on the waters you SUP foil on such as swirly choppy sloppy compared to smooth & calm surface. If I only wanted one foilboard then I would have the most comfortable board for fairly rough conditions as this would obviously cover just about any water conditions. For me at a weight of anywhere from 77 to 85 kg max. My comfortable SUP foilboard is 7ft X 31.5 wide X 115 litres volume. Which does me in knee high to overhead waves. Its a heavy board that I converted probably 2 to 3 kg heavier than a commercially made Foil SUP.
Absolutely love the stability in lumpy choppy water & love using it in offshore wind as well. Excessive nose rocker too which I dont regret either.

Its my go to board 90% of the time compared to my JP 6ft 8" X 26 wide X 96 litres. which I use at a different normal beach break only about 10% of the time anyway. And of course for my wingsurfer or prone foiling if wanted.

If I wanted a smaller lighter SUP foilboard for most conditions then I would go for a 6 to 6ft 6" X 30 wide X 105 litres. But again it wouldnt be as stable. So less wave count.

As for a prone foilboard stability isnt the problem. but volume to catch a wave early.

hilly
TAS, 7195 posts
1 Nov 2019 10:41AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
Seajuice said..
My view. Seriously depends on the waters you SUP foil on such as swirly choppy sloppy compared to smooth & calm surface. If I only wanted one foilboard then I would have the most comfortable board for fairly rough conditions as this would obviously cover just about any water conditions. For me at a weight of anywhere from 77 to 85 kg max. My comfortable SUP foilboard is 7ft X 31.5 wide X 115 litres volume. Which does me in knee high to overhead waves. Its a heavy board that I converted probably 2 to 3 kg heavier than a commercially made Foil SUP.
Absolutely love the stability in lumpy choppy water & love using it in offshore wind as well. Excessive nose rocker too which I dont regret either.

Its my go to board 90% of the time compared to my JP 6ft 8" X 26 wide X 96 litres. which I use at a different normal beach break only about 10% of the time anyway. And of course for my wingsurfer or prone foiling if wanted.

If I wanted a smaller lighter SUP foilboard for most conditions then I would go for a 6 to 6ft 6" X 30 wide X 105 litres. But again it wouldnt be as stable. So less wave count.

As for a prone foilboard stability isnt the problem. but volume to catch a wave early.



I used to think that as well @ 105kg. But since going to 6 8 x 29 125l from 7 6 x 29 140l I do not use the larger board any more. I paddle out to lumpy bumpy stuff way out all the time. Going to a 6 6 now. When up and flying less is more. But each to their own, not everyone will be the same, try different boards anytime you get the chance.

Seajuice
NSW, 907 posts
1 Nov 2019 9:18PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
hilly said..

Seajuice said..
My view. Seriously depends on the waters you SUP foil on such as swirly choppy sloppy compared to smooth & calm surface. If I only wanted one foilboard then I would have the most comfortable board for fairly rough conditions as this would obviously cover just about any water conditions. For me at a weight of anywhere from 77 to 85 kg max. My comfortable SUP foilboard is 7ft X 31.5 wide X 115 litres volume. Which does me in knee high to overhead waves. Its a heavy board that I converted probably 2 to 3 kg heavier than a commercially made Foil SUP.
Absolutely love the stability in lumpy choppy water & love using it in offshore wind as well. Excessive nose rocker too which I dont regret either.

Its my go to board 90% of the time compared to my JP 6ft 8" X 26 wide X 96 litres. which I use at a different normal beach break only about 10% of the time anyway. And of course for my wingsurfer or prone foiling if wanted.

If I wanted a smaller lighter SUP foilboard for most conditions then I would go for a 6 to 6ft 6" X 30 wide X 105 litres. But again it wouldnt be as stable. So less wave count.

As for a prone foilboard stability isnt the problem. but volume to catch a wave early.




I used to think that as well @ 105kg. But since going to 6 8 x 29 125l from 7 6 x 29 140l I do not use the larger board any more. I paddle out to lumpy bumpy stuff way out all the time. Going to a 6 6 now. When up and flying less is more. But each to their own, not everyone will be the same, try different boards anytime you get the chance.


I noticed both your board widths are the same at 29 wide. So going smaller in length & volume would be the safer option than to go lesser in width to keep stability. Something I definitely would consider.
So yeah try to keep close to the comfortable width & volume & sacrifice the length.

MLB007
39 posts
6 Nov 2019 8:28AM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
gbrungra said..

MLB007 said..


gbrungra said..
Anyone tried pumping an inflatable SUPfoil board?

F-One makes them (though I hear they have tuttle box fitment issues?)
Manta makes them:
110liters (low end for SUPfoil, but
160cmx70cmx12cm (5'3"x28"x5")
6kg (sounds heavy?)

They also make a 72liter (for prone or very lightweight SUP rider)
and a 170liter (too big for pumping?)





I can't imagine an inflatable stiff enough to be able to pump on without the energy being taken up by flex. I'd also wonder about the strength of the foil mount. I have a 20psi red paddle co board with battens that is very stiff, but I don't think it's "that" stiff. But being a lot shorter should be a lot stiffer too, right??



Yes, shorter should mean stiffer.

Also, the Manta boards specify 30psi, which would also help.


Wow, I can't imagine pumping to 30psi. from 15 to 20 about half wears me out.

toppleover
QLD, 2033 posts
12 Nov 2019 9:25PM
Thumbs Up

Picked up this morning my new, carbon wrapped - Amos shapes 4'4" x 18" x 2 3/4" 31.5 Liters - 1st impressions in really crappy conditions were very positive

Clamsmasha
WA, 311 posts
12 Nov 2019 8:08PM
Thumbs Up

Noice!

toppleover
QLD, 2033 posts
12 Nov 2019 10:38PM
Thumbs Up

Select to expand quote
Clamsmasha said..
Noice!


Yes very noice boards & built here in Australia!!!

kobo
NSW, 1063 posts
13 Nov 2019 7:40AM
Thumbs Up

Looks good, what's everyone's experience with construction and durability of boards. Obviously there is a lots of stress on a foil surfing board. So far my Slingshot boards have been fine ,they are bamboo laminate with carbon reinforced, and no depressions or cracked tracks.My mates Fanatic Sky prone board has a big depression in the middle where his front foot goes but the boxes are fine.Both boards are 12 months old.

JEG
VIC, 1469 posts
13 Nov 2019 7:51AM
Thumbs Up

that's a nice board toppleover, hopefully one day they will explore the sup foil seen.
I'm guessing the carver 6'2" will suit you Youngbreezy, also BP have the easy folier range which might be a good start if you like the BPlanet range.

toppleover
QLD, 2033 posts
13 Nov 2019 6:38PM
Thumbs Up






Subscribe
Reply

Forums > Stand Up Paddle Foiling


"Foil board volume" started by Youngbreezy