Rider: 80KG intermediate/advanced
Style: Surf
Weather: 1 foot slop to 3 foot reef session.
Build Quality: 10/10
Satisfaction: 9/10
Disclosure: No stickers on my board/no friend in shops.
My Comments:
I have ridden the 2013 North WAM/2013 BWS Drifter/2011 Naish Global/Firewire Alternator/Rusty Magic door and Katanna boards in last year or two. My fav boards in Perth are the sugarcube/drifter/magic door.
Now the Sugarcube board is 5'10 # 18 3/8 # 2 3/16 with a reasonably wide tail with more lift than the drifter.
It comes with straps though I ride strapless.
Firstly these things are bullet proof and much stronger deck than drifter, firewire, rusty. The WAM and Global have as much strength on the deck but both unfortunately were a little too stiff for my bad knee and had more of a kiteboard feel rather than a surfboard feel. The sugarcubes deck held up to some late floaters and landing out in the flats a couple of times and no dings at all. It basically is a normal epoxy board like the drifter with wood laminate on top. So it still flexs (as much as you can expect on an epoxy board).
The wide and thick tail provides huge amounts of acceleration in fat waves and the lift provides easy turning. For those of you that have not tried a hybrid fish board you have no idea what your missing out on. It amazes me the amount of kiters still on toothpic surfboards in perth slop. If you want to 'surf' the waves in Perth metro you need volume, as our waves are ALWAYS fat. The more volume in the tail of a board provides more acceleration to help you gain speed in the fat sections of the waves. The only downfall is loss of traction on steep waves, but how often do you get hollow waves at your local Perth wave spot.
The rails are reasonably 'soft.' This also helps getting through fat sections as it does not get stuck on the front foot. When you land punts and turns the soft rails help you by not digging in and bucking you off the board.
There is average rocker (more rocker makes board faster turning but slower in small waves).
I was supprised with the control the board actually had, I thought it would have a much more skatey feel given the dimensions. While I could still loose the tail when getting right at the back of the board, the board carved much better than I anticipated and seemed reasonably smooth from rail to rail given the tail size on the bigger days.
To be honest the board reminded me of the drifter with a little more volume and I think thats why I like it so much. It trucks upwind and catches waves easily.
If I had big steep reef breaks I would ride a much narrower board with less thickness and a pulled in pin tail. (katanna custom). Though this board is a pig in small surf, catches rail easily and hard to get speed on fat waves.
When I ride small beachies/reefies I would never ride a toothpic board again. Even the surfers are all pulling the noes in, going wider and more volume/width in the tail of the board when surfing beachies.
If you have not tried a hybrid fish I recommend you at least give it a crack, and not just as a light wind option. Great to advance into 'surfing the wave' and also much more forgiving than a smaller 'pro' board so you can go for those punts or big hits (and get the speed to get up there).
I wont accuse him of anything, but I think sugarcube ripped of the drifter template and refined it, and made it a little stronger. These Sugarcube boards are so cheap and quality is as good as the big brands.
Still able to get above the lip
Still able to throw tail around
YEOOOW sick board and heaps of fun! (I have not written review and they are harder than it looks. Usually I would just say sick board!)