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LucBenac said..
Can we get a view straight from teh top and the rocker too?
It looks like the raisl are very parallel all teh way to the nose?
Thanks.
Yes, that's right. The board is a multipurpose board designed for surf, downwind, and general fitness paddling, so needed to:
(a) be maximally stable for its width.
(b) to track very well for distance paddling.
(c) have enough width at the rear to pick up small bumps easily.
(d) have enough volume in the nose that it doesn't pearl when downwinding.
(e) have just enough rocker for surf and downwind, but otherwise have the fastest possible rocker (the concaves add a lot of lift so this design can get away with a flatter rocker than most guns).
These criteria are best achieved by having fairly parallel rails and a special fast rockerline.
Here it is being shaped, below. Mine is 2x6oz carbon with full PVC wrap, vacuum-bagged 3 times, thick wood stringer with special s-glass I-beam reinforcement to make it very stiff and strong, wood nose and tail blocks, with FCS mount nose and tail, double leash-plugs and plugs at tail for deck bungees for summer cruising, kickpad, gortex vent, ledge handle etc. The full monty. The wood ones use a very thick tropical hardwood laminate (e.g. 3mm rather than a typical 0.6mm that you can find on many production boards) so they are very stiff, strong and durable. There is a video somewhere of someone losing their Hypr board while surfing and it washing onto a load of rocks in Hawaii, getting repeatedly bashed on them, and when it is hauled out of the water there are only a few small scratches on it. Your standard production board would have needed extensive repairs and a lot of water pulling out of it.
Incredibly, despite this superb construction with the finest materials and all the trimmings, these boards are quite a bit cheaper than e.g. a 2020 Starboard carbon raceboard. Which makes you wonder about the value we are getting from the main brands...

Probably a good retailer would import one for you from Hypr Hawaii if you didn't want to do it yourself. You could ask the owner of the company, Ian Foo in Hawaii if he has a contact near you. There are UK and European distributors, and obviously the US is covered, but I don't know about Oz.