Page 2 of 5
Posted: Mon Nov 29, 2010 10:18 pm
by nanmoo
Told ya so! It is just so damn forgiving that my crappy wavesailing all of a sudden became respectable enough that I got some positive kudos on the beach from total strangers. Go figure how just a board can do that!?!?
Posted: Tue Nov 30, 2010 7:34 pm
by more force 4
So I'm not really clear, Kus, did you actually like it or were you just lukewarm?
Great reviews from you both!
Posted: Wed Dec 01, 2010 8:36 am
by KUS
meh
kinda like how I felt about parabolic skis when they came along....I finally ditched my 208's and 210's two winters ago
now anyone can ski... tight trees, powder, crud, where's the fun in that??
EDIT: I neglected to mention in my review the huge advantage of being able to disregard weeds .
Posted: Wed Dec 01, 2010 10:48 pm
by nanmoo
Interestingly enough I ended up sitting beside Levi at breakfast in Haiku our last morning there, then bumped into him and Keith Teboul again at the Quatro shop later on in the morning. Local celebrities seemed nice enough.
Posted: Thu Dec 02, 2010 8:45 am
by more force 4
obviously needs some tips on how to set up his gear though, looks like he put all four fins on the wrong end of the board in that shot Kus posted.
Posted: Fri Dec 03, 2010 11:36 am
by ~~~~~4j~~
Posted: Fri Dec 03, 2010 12:28 pm
by KUS
yup....they didn't have a 95 in the stable last year tho....I wonder if a 105 or 115 is next
I will have some demo days on a decent wave setup at CB sometime soon, the 85 is still wrapped up if anyone is considering a Xmas present
Klover on Tuesday sounds like fun
hope the forecast holds
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 9:03 am
by KUS
Eastside wrote:I think Windoc and Kus need some some different coloured streamers on their helmets. The same person with a white helmet, red and white sail and a Quatro orange board seemed to be running me over or stealing my wave all day
it was a great day and also with Eastside's new quad project was reminded of this thread. BTW Wdoc's board is an 84L Goya Quad with a much different shape to my Quatro LS95. The significance thou sailing with Wdoc a few times lately is that it underscores my perception that these boards really seem to fit a riding style and body type. They are not, or to a lesser degree, related to wind strength or wave conditions even, like we are used to with single fins.
I mean, I see WDoc sail his 5.6 right down to his 4.2 maxed out, same board, no matter if flat water, chop or decent waves. I do the same tho I still have a preference for the larger volume single fin on anything underpowered 5.3 and up as I experience planing thru issues with the quad in lighter winds. On the high wind side I take it right down to 3.5-3.7 conditions before I sense a need for a smaller board....which is almost never
One board quiver? These things sure come closer than any other type of board to meeting that, the range is phenomenal
and they sure are fun
On a not so great note the 2012's have gone up $250 over the 2011's
with basically no change in design, just colors. That makes Eastside's experiment even more interesting for those twin fin owners
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 9:21 am
by nanmoo
I think I've only used my 91L FSW twice since getting my 85L quad. The only time I'll even consider it is if I am using my 6.0 which feels like poo-poo on the quad. But honestly, if I need to use a 6.0 these days, I'd rather go SUP-ing. The quad was originally designed for James Bond, it does EVERYTHING.
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 9:49 am
by downwind dave
I understand you guys are honeymooning still but really. of course a 85 l board is going to overlap a little with a board just 6l bigger. ya think? i used to have a 85l one board wonder too, but now i am quite happy with a 100 and a 78l. I do understand the rationale though, if one board costs 2500$ who can afford a second one.
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 10:37 am
by nanmoo
I think I was more referring to the (lack of) limitations of the quad fin setup moreso than the volume. That being that the quads don't really slow you down much, reduce planing ability, ease of use in marginal conditions, flat water or B+J funess factor etc... so there is very little reason to switch to a single fin regardless of volume tit for tat.
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 11:14 am
by KUS
downwind dave wrote:I understand you guys are honeymooning still but really. of course a 85 l board is going to overlap a little with a board just 6l bigger...I do understand the rationale though, if one board costs 2500$ who can afford a second one.
Admittedly being a gear slut...but my AHD tri 87 which rips, OESwave 86, Evo 80, JP69, Starboard Free 87, OES 98 are all collecting dust
And I have not felt any temptation to run the Quatro 85 I have still wrapped up
and it's not even close to $2500 either, but yeah, it's also not $300
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 12:01 pm
by downwind dave
someone has to play curmudgeon to keep the discussion going!
Quad 85
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 8:37 pm
by KC7777
Hey Markus,
I'm doing some Xmas shopping for the wife. How much is that 85L Quad?
And what is the diff between the Goya Quad 84 and the Quatro Quad 85?
In 10 words or less.
Thanks,
Keith
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2011 11:53 pm
by winddoctor
Sorry to jump in Keith, but as Skyler Haywood told me (quatro and goya rider), "The Goya is all about the cutback and the Quatro is all about the bottom turn). Whatever that means. They are very similar in style and ride. The Quatro LS 85 is one of the best boards I've ridden period. But so is the Goya!