jakemoore wrote: ↑Sat Dec 01, 2018 10:40 pm
I’ve been enjoying my 100 cm mast for wave riding. Im still riding low but feel there is a better margin for error to rise without ventilating. But I broke a board after slamming into a sand bar right where the wave was forming up at low tide. I suppose I’m riding with the foil 50-70 cm deep and can definitely surf the energy of our small wind swell. So my only reason to contemplate a shorter mast is avoiding the bottom.
Very true, except that with a longer mast you also ride higher, when a bit more experienced, so you wont hit the bottom more often, not even in really small waves
The only downside, but a luxury thing, is you have to drag out a bit longer WHEN you have crashed, as you can not start on the low sand banks.
But once up, you can surf and play in the waves without risk of ventilating, so IMO the 90-100 cm masts are always better in waves, no matter what size of waves, or water depth
Shorter, I find is for hydrofoil schools and the rare spots where it is only 80 cm deep all over (we dont have any spots like that), or marginal onshore winds of course.
Some like shorter masts, is that right?
Curious as to why, because maybe you can turn a tad faster, as long as you dont lean too far into the turn, and if you are really experienced so you can ride at a very precise height ALWAYS...
Maybe some, as said before, dont mind if they touch down ever so slightly now and then, just like SUP foilers - I simply HATE that
Amazed how different opinions and likings we all got about this very topic, thus important to share experiences I think
PF