It's all down to your personal choice
and style of riding at the end of the day so this is
only a general guide...
It's
important to match the size of your wakeboard to
your
height and
weight,
it’s
important to know your riding style and the wake
you most commonly ride in order to gain optimal performance
from your wakeboard. Variables in the board such
as rocker, width, length, weight and fins all directly
affect your riding performance.
If
you ride small to midsize wakes, your pop is usually
produced more by edging, so less rocker would be
ideal. On bigger,
steeper wakes, your pop is projected more straight
up
than across, so you need the bounce created by
a wakeboard with a lot of rocker.
Rocker
Rocker is the bend you
see in a wakeboard from tip to tail. There are two types
of rocker: continuous and three-stage. Continuous rocker
is a smooth curve that does not change from tip to tail,
while three-stage rocker has two distinct bend points,
almost like a skateboard deck but not as drastic.
When you ride wakeboards with continuous rocker you lose
a bit of your pop, but you get a fast ride because the
water flows without disruption across the bottom of the
wakeboard right out through the tail. Since wakeboards
with three-stage rocker has two distinct bends in the
wakeboard, it pushes more water in front of the wakeboard.
This makes your ride slower, but with three-stage rocker
you gain a lot of pop off the wake.
The more rocker you
have, the slower, looser and less edgy the wakeboard.
With more rocker,
you tend to lose the locked-in feeling of your fins,
which allows you to break the wakeboard loose whenever
you please. For beginners, wakeboards with a lot of
rocker will feel loose, but it will teach you how to
edge rather
than
relying on your fins, which pays off in the long run.
You are forced to be more gradual with your turns and
for some the slowness makes them feel more comfortable.
As far as landings go, the more rocker your board has,
the softer the impact will feel, but you will notice
a sluggishness when you hit the water
and try to keep your direction.
In
contrast, less rocker allows the wakeboard to move
faster, hook
up better
and become more aggressive. You
can be more aggressive with your turns and really edge
hard through the wake instead of going slow and bounding
off it. You will work less, last longer on the water
and be able to land really far out in the flats because
the wakeboard planes better and you don’t have
to put so much effort into making the wakeboard move
across the back of the boat. Beginners may feel a bit
out of control and unstable with less rocker. Overall,
your impact on landings becomes harder, but your recovery
time after landing is quicker, allowing you to adjust
and move right back into acceleration again fairly
easily.
For
those who ride a small to midsize wake, your pop is
produced
more by edging,
so less rocker is ideal. Since you don’t get that
bounce up from a big steep wake, by using less rocker
you won’t get sprayed in the face as you edge
through a mellow, more gradual wake. On bigger steeper
wakes,
your pop is projected straight up more than across,
so you need the bounce created by a wakeboard that
has a
lot of rocker. You may have to work a little harder
to make the wakeboard go, but the end result is that
you
get more height.
Length
Smaller wakeboards
carry less swing weight so can spin really fast. On
the other hand,
larger wakeboards go really big and absorb huge landings.
Sizing down will make the wakeboard feel lighter, spin
faster and seem more aggressive. But your landings do
suffer. There is not as much surface area to plane across
the water, so the wakeboard will not float you as well.
You will have to work a little harder to keep the nose
from digging in and you may have to increase your boat
speed a bit to help you plane. However, smaller wakeboards
are great for people who like to do a lot of handle-pass
flips and spins and move around the water fast. It can
also be a great learning tool. If you have a selection
of wakeboards and are working on a spin, for example,
sizing down will help you rotate better and farther.
When you get the landing and get comfortable on the smaller
wakeboard, start trying to increase your rotation on
the wakeboard sized for you. If you struggle to get the
whole rotation, move down again. Land the trick then
move back up.
| 119cm |
up to 6 stones |
| 121cm |
up to 7.5 stones |
| 128cm |
up to 10.5 stones |
| 131cm |
up to 11 stones |
| 133cm |
up to 12 stones |
| 136cm |
up to 13.5 stones |
| |
|
| 138cm |
10 stones and up |
| 140cm |
11 stones and up |
| 142cm |
12 stones and up |
Sizing your wakeboards up from your established size
lends a slower, smoother style. A bigger wakeboard moves
slower in the water, making you look smoother. The bigger
surface area really lets you spin slowly and hold
on to those grabs for a long time. If you are into going
big, the increased surface area lets the wakeboard land
softer, saving your body from the bigger impacts. You
can use the different wakeboard sizes as a learning tool
and size up or down to help you learn.
Width
The
width of a wakeboard directly affects how high it sits
in
the water.
There are three places to check wakeboard widths: Tips
and tails – those are generally the same – and
in the middle. Narrower tips and tails sit lower and
make the wakeboard turn more aggressively. However, to
initiate spins you might have to wait longer because
the wakeboard doesn’t release as well through the
wake. A rider may want to load up fins on the ends of
this wakeboard since it sits lower in the water. Wider
tips and tails allow you to break your fins loose and
slide around for lip tricks and surface tricks, and a
better release for spins off the wake.
The wider the middle
of the wakeboard, the higher it will sit in the water
and the harder it will bounce off the wake. You do lose
some ability to edge the wakeboard really aggressively
and cannot rely on your fins as much. This teaches you
to use the rail of the wakeboard to edge through the
water instead of relying on your fins.
For the big, mellow wakes and aggressive out-in-the-flats
riding you should find a wakeboard that is wide through
the middle and a little narrower at the tip and tail
so you can edge longer and use your fins more. For an
all-around loose snowboard-type feel and those huge,
steep wakes, find a wakeboard that is wider throughout.
Weight
Lighter wakeboards
are easier to move around and may have better flex patters,
which affects your pop and landings. Weight is a variable
that is closely related to length and can be used the
same way.
Bottom Design
On
the bottom of the wakeboard you will see concaves,
channels or maybe nothing at all. Each performs a different
function, fine-tuning how the wakeboard rides through
the water according to its width from tip to tail, fin
setup, rocker and tip and tail shape.
Concaves
create lift and make the wakeboard sit higher in the
water. Ever so simply, concaves in different areas
of the wakeboard created lift in different areas of the
wakeboard. For instance, a double concave in the middle
and a single concave in the tip and tail keep the wakeboard
riding higher in the water overall. A double concave
in the middle will always sit higher than the single
concave.
Channels
act like long fins. It’s something for
the water to run into and along to help the wakeboard
edge harder. If there are channels through the middle
of the wakeboard and not at the tip or tail, it will
be a hard-edging wakeboard but will still release well
through the wake, depending on the fin setup. On a wakeboard
with channels running through the tip and tail, the fins
will hook better and the wakeboard will not release as
well through the wake. Finally, a featureless wakeboard
bottom relies on the tip and tail shape, the
width throughout the rocker and the fins.
Fins
The
closer you move the fins towards the center of the
wakeboard,
the quicker and better the wakeboard releases
from the wake. The farther you move them out towards
the tip and tail, the longer the wakeboard will stay
hooked into the wake and it won’t release as well.
How
the fins work depends on what size fins you are riding:
Long based fins
Their effect is based on their increased surface area – The
more you have the better the fin hooks up. A tall fin
with a short base is almost the same as a short fin with
a long base because they have a similar amount of surface
area. Long-based fins release better, give the wakeboard
a loose, snowboardy feel when riding flat through the
water.
Molded fins
These are big channels in the board that act like
fins.
Multi-finned setups
These capture the maximum edge hold and aggressiveness
into the wake and through the wake.
Canted side fins
These are fins that lean out on an angle. These fins
are not as active when the wakeboard is riding flat
through the water, but the more you lean on edge the
more the wakeboard hooks up. The inside fin digs while
the outside lifts, creating leverage to help the wakeboard
edge hard.
Cupped side fins
They have the same effect as canted fins but add more
of a push-pull effect. The cupped fin allows you to
use a smaller fin but still get the hold of a bigger
fin due to the increased surface area of the cupped
side of the fin. These fins are very deceiving – they
look small and loose but really aren’t.