Hi Guys,
Just wondering if anyone can compare these two boards and advise on suitability for 100kg old dog moving down from long board. I am going pretty good on the longboard, scratchy gybes, tacks and planning in strong winds.
Which do you think would be a "Keeper" ie one to hold onto longest?
thanks,
Barry
Personally I'd be looking for something a bit higher performance. I think those would get boring quickly.
Riden both of them. Own the funster and ridden mates 160d. Around similar weight and always the keen beginner ??
hands down the Bic is the more versatile board and will take you further
both have centre board (Bic removable with insert available)
bic gets up and planes much like a purpose built lightwind board always felt with the Funster was working hard. That's probably down to fins.
That is the deal breaker. The Bic takes Tuttle and easier to get some serious fin in for light wind stuff
Both similar width. Funster has soft deck which is nice
however I'm a bit with the previous poster. Given your progress on the longboard maybe try something a little smaller
me I would try some different boards
if it was down to the 2 mentioned and one had to be a personal keeper than the Bic. However if you have kids the Jp is more family friendly ( soft deck)
do you have some big sails to get these boards going. Was wondering if that has been cinsidered
with the longboard light winds are covered.
what wind strengths are you aiming at as this also influences the choice
initialky I used a longboard and an old Bic 283 techno (narrower) as my quiver. Was able to do this as I learnt waterstart on longboard
cherrs Jeff
Riden both of them. Own the funster and ridden mates 160d. Around similar weight and always the keen beginner ??
hands down the Bic is the more versatile board and will take you further
both have centre board (Bic removable with insert available)
bic gets up and planes much like a purpose built lightwind board always felt with the Funster was working hard. That's probably down to fins.
That is the deal breaker. The Bic takes Tuttle and easier to get some serious fin in for light wind stuff
Both similar width. Funster has soft deck which is nice
however I'm a bit with the previous poster. Given your progress on the longboard maybe try something a little smaller
me I would try some different boards
if it was down to the 2 mentioned and one had to be a personal keeper than the Bic. However if you have kids the Jp is more family friendly ( soft deck)
do you have some big sails to get these boards going. Was wondering if that has been cinsidered
with the longboard light winds are covered.
what wind strengths are you aiming at as this also influences the choice
initialky I used a longboard and an old Bic 283 techno (narrower) as my quiver. Was able to do this as I learnt waterstart on longboard
cherrs Jeff
Have also been looking at the Gecko 146....I live in Sydney, sail at Botany Bay - 15-20 knots seems to be quite common over summer. I also will be sailing in Jervis Bay further south which gets a lot of 25-30+ knot days. I have a 4, 5 and 6 at the moment and plan to get an 8. As I am already fairly old and not particularly into adrenaline sports I may end up being happy with a longish board with a dagger board to cruise around on. Maybe even a Kona one or Bic techno 283 would suit? What are you sailing at the moment?
thanks for the help
Old and slow myself
in my group we have had no fun on the bigger Geckos. Some been bought and quickly sold often for older slalom type boards ie starboard futuras and carves or equivalent in other brands.
what do I ride.... too many boards too little time????
Last season it was Wally Lt and starboard futura 150 around 2010 model.
main sails 8.5 and 7.5 covers up general wind ranges mentioned
also spent a great season on the Kona early on but it got relegated once I found the magic of longboards for light winds
cherrs Jeff
Which longboard do you currently have?
Bic windsup 11 6, its pretty cool
Look for a cheap used Kona if you want mellow with some progression available.
Or else a 140-160L freeride without a centerboard and preferably a foil box if you want to future proof the purchase.