
I’ve been procrastinating on this post for a while but finally got
around to writing it. I tried Surftech’s 5′6 Xanadu Rocket Fish many
months ago thanks to the good guys at Surftech
Hawaii. I had seen this board out in the line-ups of Oahu’s popular
surf spots e.g. Diamond Head Cliffs, Kewalos, Bowls, Rockpiles, etc and
it seemed like the most consistent Surftech board out there in the
surf. After a few unsuccessful tries, I was able to borrow the Xanadu
Rocket Fish just in time for tiny waves! Bummer. Regardless, I took the
board out to see how it would do in crap surf and after the first three
sessions I thought this board was a total tool. The deck seemed way to
flat and I couldn’t seem to get this board to work…probably because of
the poor surf more than anything.
I was about to give up on this board and return it to Surftech when
I decided to take it out to Diamond Head during a small swell. With low
expectations, I paddled out and caught a few in between waves.
Amazingly, this board turned on with speed and tight turns coming with
ease. It seemed like a completely different board from the first few
sessions and the more I rode this board the more I liked it.
After that fateful Diamond Head session, I rode the board almost
every day for a month. This board was simply magic for the typical
waves we have in town (weak and fatter on most days). The board paddled
easy despite it’s short length (5′6 x 21″ 3/16 x 2″ 1/4) and this board
paddled into waves better than any board I’ve ever rode which I
attribute to a perfect entry rocker. This board is blazing fast down
the line and with each pump on an open face the speed you can generate
is mind boggling. Even with all that speed, the board is still very
maneuverable with loads of drive off the bottom but just loose enough
for tight turns in the pocket.
I’m not sure if Surftech has discontinued making this board as it’s
no longer on their website but you can still find them in most surf
shops. Here’s tip for those looking to buy one. The most common thing I
hear from people who own Rocket Fishes is they always wish they got the
next smallest model (board comes in lengths of 5′6, 5′8, 5′10, 6′0). At
first glance you’ll probably want to err on the safe side and get more
than enough board but the rails are boxy and full making for a full
volume board and the Tuflite skin make these boards extremely buoyant.
So if you’re thinking of getting the 5′10, you should probably get the
5′8.
A few more notes, I did try a friend’s 5′8 and there was a pretty
big difference in volume…I can see why you’d want to get the smaller
board. The 5′8 for me was too buoyant and thick for me and made the
board feel more like a funboard…easy wave catching but less responsive.
Future Rasta Keel Fins

The Xanadu Rocket Fish also comes with Future keel fins which work
ok for stock fins but I’ve heard that the Future Rasta Keel Sea Shepard
fins work insane on the Rocket Fish. I hope to get a pair of those fins
and try it out and I’ll be sure to report back when I get them.
Guest Post by Oliver Irwin
Most people who surf have a friend of a friend who knows someone who
has heard of a guy who is a shaper. Weather they are a casual tinkerer
who does a couple boards in their garage or professional shaper who
makes boards day in and day out, in my experience, it has been pretty
easy to cell them up and find out what they’re about and what they
think the next board you should get should be. It is my dream to find a
shaper who I can go out and surf with, who understands my ability and
has the foresight to think about what would work well for me, who would
also give me free boards, dinner,chicks and financial advice. I haven’t
found that dream, but getting somewhere close to it is worth fighting
for.
Eric Streufert is the guy who I have found works really well with
me. He works for Patagonia and shapes boards everyday. He is lucky
enough that Patagonia allows him to use their shop to produce boards in
their shop on his personal time. His line is appropriately called
S-Turn. Everyone I know who has ridden one of his boards has been
totally satisfied with the quality and craftsmanship including me. Eric
listens to me carefully and always gives me insightful feedback that
refines what I am want in a board. I also enjoy hearing what he has to
say about what hes doing in the world of shaping.
The following is an edited transcript of an interview I had with Eric in February 2008.
What kinda boards are you making now?
Fishes are the hottest selling board right now. They work really
well at Pipe in Ventura. There’s two different kinds of fishes I’m
making. The hybrid fish I make is a modern twin fin with a small
trailer fin. This board is more high performance than the other type of
fish I’ve been making - which is basically a stand up knee board with a
big fat swallowtail. This is a more retro board with at least 7″ base
twin fins on it. It’s really fast down the line and you get big long
arcing cutbacks. You ride them really short too, basically like if you
ride a 6′2″ shortboard, the fish you would ride would be about 5′6″ to
5′8″. For a hybrid fish go up another inch.
Dimensions go from about 20.5 inches wide and 2.5 thick —older guys
up Ill make the boards up to 6′6″ and 2 ¾ to 3 inches for the big fat
dudes.
What do you do at Patagonia?
Technically I’m a sander in the glassing manufacturing part. But I’m familiar with all the steps of building boards.
Are the boards you’re making similar to the boards you make at Patagonia?
The practice is different, they use epoxy with a closed cell EPS
board. My boards are built with regular foam and covered with epoxy
resin. I glass the boards differently. I find that the flex in the
regular kind of foam is better. It’s also easier to shape. Plus if you
get a ding with a closed cell eps board you have to fix it immediately,
and if you fix it with anything but epoxy, it will ruin the board and
dissolve the foam. Glassing epoxy over normal foam has the advantage
that you can patch a ding with poly or epoxy and you will still
maintain the integrity of the board.
How many boards are you making for S-Turn?
I generally make about 2-4 boards a month just taking orders out of
the water at California Street. I have a good niche market down at the
point. I also make shortboads, funshapes and longboards.
Can you talk about shortboard vs fish?
Fishes are good all around board, great at point breaks, but
shortboards are good for good waves. Waves which have power or whatnot.
That kneeboard Im making — people think they’d be too loose, but
they’re actually more drivey and won’t spin out the way you might think
they would.
When the surf gets softer — get into the shorter fishy boards. The
shorter your board, the easier it is to fit your board into a smaller
faced wave.
How about riding a fish in bigger more powerful surf?
I like it Ive done it. It’s challenging. It’s a really fast free
feeling. You’re just flying. But with a fish its more challenging
catching waves, and holding into your bottom rail. With a fish you’ve
gotta be right under it and have better wave knowledge. A longer board
can glide and you might get a wave that you can’t on a fish.
Can you expand on that? What is really happening with the rail and fin when riding a fish?
When riding a fish you kind of use your rail the way a boogie
boarder would use their rail — boogie boarders don’t even have fins, so
instead of just turning off the tail as you would with a tri fin
thruster board, you’re using one of your twin fins plus your forward
part of your front foot rail. You’re essentially holding in with the
rail.
With a tri-fin going into a bottom turn you still have two fins in
the water, on a twin fin you have only one fin in the water, along with
your rail. It all has to do with the fact that the wide point is
forward of center on most fishes.
Fishes have the wide point forward of center by the front foot. On
shortboards and funboards you’re driving off of your back foot where
the wide point is back of center — creating the driving point off your
back foot. If thrusters are rear wheel drive, then fishes are front
wheel drive.
Any ideas on the next trend in boards?
The quad craze in full swing. Quad fishes, and regular shortboards
are going quad. Ive never liked them myself. They originally came out
in the early 80s. In and out. In the single fin era to twin fin era the
quads came for a sec and then the thruster took over. Today, they’re
more popular than when they first came out. Quads are more drivey than
a twin fin. In my experience, when doing a big roundhouse cutback,
there’s a certain point in the cutback where the fins sort of release.
Mid way through your roundhouse cutback, it kinda pops out and slides,
where if you had a thruster that wouldn’t happen.
What do you think will happen with quads the way they are progressing?
I’ve seen what they’re doing on quads — they keep bringing the
trailing fins closer to the stringer. They’re going to keep bringing
them in and you’re going to have a thruster.
When did u first shape?
I was around it when I was a grommet. My brother who is 6 years
older was shaping in Santa Barbara for Clyde Beaty and the like. I
think it was in 1997 I shaped my first board.
You only have a MySpace page, right? I think you want to stay underground? Why?
I’m really busy with helping everyone else out, I’m actually kinda
afraid to get all kinds of orders in. One of these days ill have to get
my own show going. But Ive got a pretty good gig where people let me do
boards under their roof. If I were to go production it might not work.
It’s kinda a hard transition to go from a steady paycheck to all on
your own. Right now it doesn’t matter cause I have plenty of other work.
People will come up to me and ask wow what is that thing that youre
riding. How long is that board? Is that a kneeboard? All the people in
the water just kinda found out that I make them and then they ask and I
do.
You know, I haven’t heard of kneeboards so much. Is a kneeboard the same thing as a fish?
I use the old school templates off of kneeboards from the 70s and
put modern concave bottoms (like single to double barrel concaves)
which help them plane better. Those old style boards were more v-bottom
which turn really nice, but when the waters coming across the bottom of
the board, its being slowed down by the v-shape in the board vs a
concave you actually plaing off the surface of the water and you almost
have an air pocket. it’s less drag which is faster. Its kinda like a
hovercraft.
What do you think about when u are talking to someone new about making them a board?
If you’re out in the water its really good to see their ability. If
they’re not a great surfer, you tend to make them a wider thicker board
so it’s easier to catch waves. If they’re better you’d tend to thin out
their board more. Generally because they’re able to generate more speed.
I truly believe in flex patterns. Really thick boards wont flex as much and wont bend into the wave.
What do u think of off the rack boards? Compared with having
someone shape you a board with your body weight and ability in mind.
Off the rack is generally more pop-out. The boards not customized.
There’s not anything wrong with them. But I’m pretty anti china because
a lot of the people that are big in the business are having their
boards made in china which means that people are actually having to
close down their shops. So people like me in the glass factories are
actually losing their jobs. And the quality is terrible cause they dont
know what they’re doing really. But thats whats happening — people are
selling out.
Ever made aboard that didn’t ride well?
Al Merrick has made boards that I didn’t like - but has also made some that I thought were amazing. Every board is different.
Are you interested in experimenting with strange shapes?
I’ve made flex tails gimmick off of George Greenough where I’ve
ground out all the foam in the tail to where its just glass— you glass
multiple layers in the tail so that the back 2 inches of the tail is
just pure glass. You can actually push on it with your thumb and it
bends. As George Greenough says, it allows you to create a variable
rocker.
Fin placement moving stuff around. Extreme rockers and extreme flat
rockers. Everything works good— it just depends on what waves you’re
riding. Curvy-er the wave curvy-er the board. Flater the wave flatter
the board.
Have you seen board shapes/designs that have inspired you, or influenced the way you look at boards?
Yeah I think everybody looks at everybody’s stuff. Everybody copies
everybody. Even Al Merrick brings his old designs and bring them back
to life. I remember somewhere in the bible there’s a passage that
really says that there’s nothing new.
Malcomb Campbell’s got a pretty unique thing: The bonzer. I’d give
him credit for having the 1st thruster. Not Simon Anderson who got
credit.
What do you think of Bonzers?
I haven’t really ridden them. I have a few that I have to fix up, but Im planning on riding them. I got 3 of them in my garage.
Do you ride different kinds of boards a lot?
Sometimes you feel like you’re surfing stagnant – I can get kinda board with what I ride so I like to mix it up a lot.
When I get bored I like to ride something different. Some people get
really screwed up if they mix up their equipment, but some people like
Tom Curren can just jump on any thing and just rip up on it.
Being in the business - are there funny stories where you
would notice something that someone who doesn’t work with surfboards
wouldn’t?
(after thinking about this one for a bit) Oh yeah…You know, if you
look at the bottom of pelicans when you see them flying low over the
water? I’ve noticed the contour in their wingspan and their body. If
you watch them glide you see how the concave in their wings creates
lift and allows them to glide. Each of their wings — if you were to put
a flat surface beneath their wings — you’d see a concave on each side
of the wing. And their body is the v part — which cuts the air or what
not. I look at that contour and see the double barrel concave which is
a really popular design in a lot of surfboards.
What’s the best way for people to get in touch with you?
S-Turn’s cell number is 805-815-8274. Or I can be reached by email at thestreuferts@yahoo.com
http://www.myspace.com/sturnsurfboards

Since 1967 - Our Shapers have been providing Surfboards throughout
the world, shaping surfboards renowned for their performance and by far
some of the highest quality boards on the market today.

All Surfboards from Riff Raff are hand shaped with a variety of High
quality Blanks from US Blanks to Biofoam even Balsa and Koa and colored
by some of the finest Artist in the US, fitted with Custom Island Fins
(made in Hawaii) designed by our Shapers and finished with a High Gloss
Polish by the most reputable Glassers in the islands.

Our surfboards are unique offering the best of the past, bringing it to the present, boards that ride great and look impressive.
Riff Raff board builders come from various backgrounds and shaping
styles, creating surfboards for such riders as Dino Miranda, Sunny
Garcia, Martin Potter, Rusty Keaulana, Johnny Boy Gomes and many more.
But they all have one thing in common, the love for the “classic old
school” board, thus we are able to create a unique line up of custom
surfboards, from all eras.
When you order a board from Riff Raff you have the piece of mind
that your board is truly custom, no two boards are alike, as they are
hand crafted from start to finish solely for you, the rider.
Riff Raff Surfboards pride themselves on keeping you updated
throughout your build. Once your order is complete we`ll register you
into our Private Online Status Page, where you can get an up to date
progress report on your surfboard build. Just another reason to choose
Riff Raff Surfboards as your board building company.

Have fun and check out our Retro surfboards at…
From All at Riff Raff Surfboards
Aloha!






After writing a post on Firewire Surfboards back in March of 2007, I finally got a chance to try one of these hyped up boards. Luckily for me, Kumau at Tropical Blends
was cool enough to let me his personal board. For some reason, the
Firewire people have been uninterested in letting me demo a board…who
knows, perhaps they’re not into free publicity? Anyway, I recently got
a chance to try a 5′10 Futura on a dying south swell which would be a
good test to see how this board worked in less than perfect surf. The
Futura is available in 3 models:
5′10 x 19 1/2″ 2 1/4″
6′0 x 19 3/4″ x 2 3/8″
6′2 x 20″ x 2 1/2″
All come with swallow tails and a thruster FCS setup. An interesting
note on Kumau’s board…he set it up with FCS MR twin fins (glass) and
added the smaller trailer to it. I had never heard of anyone riding
this other than as a thruster but he said it worked well for him so I
figured it would be very interesting.

This board has a somewhat fuller shortboard outline, lower rocker,
yet overall the board is pretty thin…especially in the nose area.
Paddling was very easy and it definitely floated a lot better than it
would have if it were traditional polyurethane.
I ate sh!t on the first wave…guess I wasn’t prepared for the
slippiness of the twin fin setup but after a few more waves I figured
out where my weight needed to be and voila…I was very impressed at how
responsive the board felt. The biggest thing I’ve heard about Firewire
boards is how they flex out of turns. Well I didn’t really feel the
board pushing out of turns and giving me a boost of speed (probably
because the surf was only waist/chest high at best) but the board did
feel a bit more springy and lively than even a fresh fiberglass board.
The Futura demonstrated exactly what the Firewire website claimed: “The
Future Series merges the innate performance of new school fish design
with the acceleration of Future Shapes Technology, creating a surfboard
with pedal to the metal top end speed and remarkably tight turning
radius. Buckle your seatbelt.’ This board could definitely fly and I
was blazing on the small little walls. It’s hard to say if it’s because
of the flex in the board or more because of the twin fin setups which
usually go faster than tri-fins. Either way, this particular setup is
killer for smaller days head high and under with twin fin speed and
thruster performance. The Future basically rides like a traditional
shortboard yet it’s so much more forgiving in less than ideal surf.
I have another day to try this board out in a tri-fin setup so I’ll
report back on my findings. So far, the hype is true and these boards
are quite remarkable. Best thing about them, they’re pretty resilient
to dings and damage so if you’re the type of surfer that always wrecks
your boards, you may want to try a Firewire.

The local surf tech rep here in Hawaii has been cool enough to give
SurfboardShack.com a full run of all their Surftech demos. While I’ve
always favored traditional PU boards, I am quite intrigued with epoxy
boards and Surftech’s long list of boards shaped by the world’s top
shapers. After writing an article debating which surfboard material works better, epoxy or polyurethane,
I’ve had a number of people inquire about how well epoxy, most notably
Surftech boards work in a variety of conditions. Up to this point I had
only ridden one Surftech board and a few other epoxys so I guess you
can say I haven’t given epoxy a fair chance. Anyway, thanks to
Surftech, I now have access to write about every Surftech board
available and let you all know how they ride.
I just tested Randy French’s 5′8 Soul Fish the other day in marginal
shoulder high surf out on the South Shore of Oahu. This particular Soul
Fish has dimensions of 5′8 x 20.75″ x 2.5″ and rides with twin keel
fins. When I first took a look at this board I noticed how thick the
middle to front section of the board was and knowing how floaty epoxy
is, I knew this board would paddle well.
The waves in town this particular day were average with an out of
season south swell rolling through. Incoming tide at my normal surf
spot which is better suited toward fishy type boards. The waves were on
average shoulder high coming in at a funny angle and not connecting all
the way to the inside…definitely not epic conditions! Today would be a
great day to test the limits of this small wave fish as the Surftech
website claims that this board is recommended for gutless to shoulder
high surf.
I caught a bunch of waves and it was very amazed at how easy it was
to paddle into these weak waves. The board does have a lot of volume
for being only 5′8 but I think the ‘floatiness’ of epoxy along with the
super flat entry rocker made wave catching ridiculously easy. Once up
and riding, this board had more than enough drive…I would say it was
more drivey than loose and very responsive. Cutbacks were a cinch and
the board seemed to want to go where my feet went. Pumping was pretty
good as well and I got a few ultra fast speed pumps on the waves that
lined up just right.
The only downside to this board is that it didn’t hold very well on
the drop on a couple head high sets. I was practically dropping in
sideways on one head high wave which would make me assume that unless
you like feeling out of control on larger waves, you should surf this
board shoulder high and under. This board is an awesome small wave
groveler board, especially for those who don’t like riding longboards.
Lastly, I’ve had problems with epoxy boards being too floaty and not
being able to keep the rail in the water, especially in windy
conditions. However, the Soul Fish rode almost like a traditional PU
board even with offshore winds around 20 MPH.
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