Showing posts with label wooden surfboard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wooden surfboard. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 August 2014

WOOD SURFBOARD DAY 2014

Sorry I, once again, forgot to take many photos of this year's Woodie Day and most of them I accidently used a weird filter thingo.
Sergi checks out one of the many high quality boards on the grass at The Alley.
I would have loved to get around to meet more of these builders but time got away.

Two professional looking SUPs which I believe were brought all the way down from Mackay.

Two reeeally nice boards, including a clinker channel bottom by Paul from POG surfboards on the Sunny Coast. Andrew Wells of Grown Surfboards runs a wooden eye over them.

Kim Staples should look pretty chuffed. This photo really doesn't do the finish justice. A really classic pro looking board. 


Another beautiful board by a builder I never got to say gday to.

Foam-core Hot-Curl by Charl B (Dorff boards) who's always got a new idea itching away in his head.

A lot of recycled timber in this one.

This board was built by my mate AV who loves to surf anything different. This was his first wooden board and was built from scratch with pencil and rule..no computer aid at all.

All hand made fins too.

and a nice inlaid logo.

Scotty Dickson from the Sunny Coast with a beautiful chambered board. Super clean lines are a dead giveaway to his pro cabinet making background.

Another pro looking job by a mystery builder.

And a classic by Gold Coast board builder and Wooden Surfboard day organiser Grant Newby, aka Big Fish.

A good day was had by all.

For everything you need to build your own wooden board

Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Chambered Longboard - Traditional "Pig" by Kim Staples


Gold Coast Firie Kim needs an outlet to help him unwind.
And outlets don't get much more enjoyable than creating a classic wooden surfboard with your own hands.

He's started by sourcing some beautiful clean Australian-grown Paulownia Fortunei
The traditional, flat "log" rocker fits nicely on 100mm wide timber minimising waste and expense.

Faces of the Paulownia timber are dressed for glueing. At this point the timber is only temporarily glued or discreetly screwed together. 

Outline is cut and the board is shaped in the same way you would shape a foam board.

The shaped board is then taken apart so the inside can be "chambered" to reduce weight.

The idea is to remove the maximum amount of material from the innards while leaving enough to maintain shape and strength.

Individual profiles are permanently glued back together.

Kim's done a great job shaping. No flats or bumps. Everything nice and fair.

The beautiful piece of camphor-laurel he has selected for the fin and tail block blend beautifully with the grain of the Paulownia.
And a really professional glass job to finish the work of art that it is.

Beautiful and...
 ...Beautiful.


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Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Paulownia offcuts board 2

I'm really enjoying this build but am being disciplined and am doing it as an after hours project so it's a bit of a drawn-out story.
So I draw the outline




Then I'll slice it into 45mm thingamees.

'Saw didn't quite make the depth which kinda made things easier.
I flipped the blank and cut from the other side with a jigsaw which, when given its head, just followed the cut.

Then draw the profile on each thingamee. 

Don't forget to number the thingamees.



Den scwoo tugevva wiv scwoos.

Mdf spacers will be replaced with some nice cedar stwingers between thingamees.

Bwank.



Cut outline



All ready for shaping.




















Tuesday, 3 June 2014

Paulownia offcuts board


I couldn't bear to relegate this stack of knotty and hail-marked Paulownia to the skip bin so started to hatch a plan.

Not long enough to run fore-aft so I chopped 'em up to run transverse.




I'm gluing the sections together on a rocker jig. Each section is scribed to fit the next.





Hopefully my board fits within the blank. Just looking at it, I think I'll need to increse the rocker a little to fit.









Saturday, 10 May 2014

High Quality First build.


Michael Powell is a design tech teacher in Brisbane and judging by the professional finish of his first HWS (hollow wood surfboard), his students are in good hands.
A simple jig made using the rocker curve of the central spine.


A bit tricky negotiating that tight radius at the nose but once the skins are on the outline will be shaped "fair" and any small kinks in the frames will be hidden.

Some nice detail in Michael's top and bottom skins. Nice and fine and not overdone.


Ribs are square and spine is straight and central, ensuring a wonk-free outline and foil.


Ready for rails

Finish sanding and fine tuning of bottom contours.

Some nice Australian silky oak and balsa fins. Different densities make shaping difficult but Michael has managed to get them foiled nicely.


4oz glass fabric laminated in Kinetix epoxy plus a fill coat gives this board a super tough finish.
Coupled with internal lamination, this board will be really hard to hurt.


Why would you fill your rack with white thruster popouts when you can have a beautiful, superbly handcrafted "piece" from your own hand.


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