Hi Rolf,
Yeah I sail mainly at home in the Netherlands at the Northsea, Wijk aan Zee/IJmuiden/Bloemendaal are all a 10-20min a drive.The last 2 weeks I,m in Ireland-Brandon Bay enjoying holiday in Ocean swell. Epic here!I tried a few Appletrees and although I love the fact that they are designed just around the corner and build in Europe, I never found them really stable. Once on the foil they are great, but easy to roll and harder to get on the foil, so it isnt just numbers in a shape to look at.The SuperK feels a bit bigger as the numbers suggest, but it suits me and my style of riding really well.If you are foiling nearby we can swap boards when i,m back so you can try it out.
@Nordroi, I totally agree o the fact that itsnt just length and width but also rocker. As a (wannabe) DWer I have no problem that these boards differentiate from wing foil as it is just a different discipline.I disagree the part about mid-length for stronger wind.
I used my board here in 30+ knots and 3m+ waves fully overpowered with my 3.5 (wave-sailors couldnt hold on there 4m sails!) and the board was still doing very well. Especially when it gets rough the extra length makes getting on the board a LOT easier and when it is that windy, I can,t make very short snappy turns anyway so the length doesnt hinder me at all.
Unlike my AK Phazer 5.6x27x90l the nose doesnt seem to catch wind from under.
3 days ago it was powered up 3m wind and if my wife would be able to shuttle I would have done a Sup DWer, but she couldnt so I went winging with a 3m maxxed out on my Wingdrifter 5.4x22x56l The shorter lower volume was fun once on the foil, but way harder to get on your feet.
What might be an influence is body length. I,m 188cmx97kg so my centre of gravity is higher but I also got more leverage and a wider stance as some one of lets say 170cm. To me those mid length feel way more in balance as the 5.6x90l kinda boards.