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Forums > Stand Up Paddle General

Board weight - how much does it matter?

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Created by SupDogz > 9 months ago, 24 Jul 2016
SupDogz
1 posts
24 Jul 2016 8:44PM
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Hey, would love to get people's thoughts on this.

I am looking at buying a race board for lake water paddling - flat water with chop, cross winds and even downwind. So I need a versatile board. I compete in all conditions around the province.

I found a few great board options with good prices but not sure how much I should factor in the boards weight. E.g., but a brand name hybrid carbon mix board or full carbon small brand board. I am female, 5'6", 120lbs with good stability and board are all:12'6" x 24" or 25".

Thank you!

Options are:
1. 2016 Starboard All Star - reviews look great! But I can only afford the hybrid carbon which is 27lbs.

2. 2016 SIC pro-lite scc - carbon composite annot find the exact weight but less than 20lbs

3. 2016 Bark Contender lite - <20lbs

4. 2016 Naish Javelin - carbon, 20lbs

5. Small players - cheaper board at -$1000 but all carbon

Imoutthere
181 posts
24 Jul 2016 10:10PM
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You may wish to use metric measurements SupDogz. There may be some reluctance to reply from some of us.All the best.





Kieranr
NSW, 526 posts
25 Jul 2016 3:36AM
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In the water a kilo here and there is kinda negligible imo.
However, where you really notice the weight is carrying the board & loading onto cars etc.
Very hard to go past the SIC and that awesome carry handle.
As always, best advice is to demo, demo, demo and form your own opinion based on how the boards feel in real life use.

Mastbender
1972 posts
25 Jul 2016 7:42AM
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I'd say it mostly depends on you, a concrete boat will float, but they are a bitch to pick up.
So yes, demo, on land as well.

warwickl
NSW, 2357 posts
25 Jul 2016 5:41PM
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For me light weight means; quicker acceleration, easier to turn, less volume required for equivalent floatation (ie less density) and easier to handle. Only negative mostly more $ but imo well worth it.

GrumpySmurf
WA, 230 posts
25 Jul 2016 4:31PM
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Is the Allstar really 27 pounds / 12.24kg? As I just got a used 2013 Allstar 12'6x25 and weighed it in at 11.1kg.

gregc
VIC, 1299 posts
27 Jul 2016 5:36PM
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Depends on the application really. I love sprint racing and frankly you do notice a kg here and there and it really does make a difference. I can't speak to doing Time Trials and stuff over a 5 or 10k distance as personally I dont think it makes a difference at all.

hanza1111
84 posts
27 Jul 2016 6:33PM
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Select to expand quote
Kieranr said..
In the water a kilo here and there is kinda negligible imo.
However, where you really notice the weight is carrying the board & loading onto cars etc.
Very hard to go past the SIC and that awesome carry handle.
As always, best advice is to demo, demo, demo and form your own opinion based on how the boards feel in real life use.


I would have to agree. Just think carrying your board after a hard session, or over a long distance after a downwinder in 20-30 knots plus and trying not to get your board blown away... this is where a really good designed handles come into play.

From experience I have had 2013 and 2015 Javelins... Probably the lightest boards on the market and excellent deep handle.

Lately been paddling SIC X12 and X14 both pro-lite x24... About a kg heavier than naish but I feel offer more durability. Handle is also excellent as you can grip with your whole hand. You can't beat the X series on the lake on the flat days! Also been using it in all conditions from beach technical races to 30 knot downwinders. Surfs really well too. Hoping to try and compare the new FX series boards soon but they will be a tad heavier and 25 wide and $$$ as new model.

As you can't afford a starboard full carbon I can only comment on my friends hybrid construction all star 2014 I tried last week on a downwinder. Felt heavy and sluggish. No centre handle! Can't comment on the new boards or if they finally include a centre handle?!

Can't comment on the bark as have no experience.

As for the smaller brands not so well known just see who else paddles them and get their feedback. Make sure they have had it for a while and can comment. Is a good option if you want to start off on a budget but bear in mind you will probably upgrade from it anyway later on (just think in that mindset). I just like to buy right the first time. Don't get me wrong there are some good cheaper boards out there but there are only a few, cheaper usually means less build quality and design, as well as I have seen in some, basic centre handles... they are sharp to the touch and just can't compete with the naish and sic handles. just what I've seen.

Hope that helps... but to summarise yes I think you should definitely factor in board weight for your paddler height and weight.

good luck



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"Board weight - how much does it matter?" started by SupDogz