Well, here goes, back in the saddle again. I
haven’t posted on the blog since last year. I enjoyed a number of great swells
last summer and early fall, riding waves of all shapes and sizes from here in
Noboribetsu all the way around to Hakodate. Caught a few classic days in
Volcano Bay as well. The great season kept me from blogging, then, to my great
disappointment, the north winds started up early and the winter surf was less
than inspiring. Sure, there were a few good days here and there, but not enough
to stoke me to blog.
However, as I have a new board project
underway, and I like to document my builds for future reference, I am stepping
back up to the plate.
The idea for this build was inspired by a
trip to Daiso (a Japanese “dollar store” chain) where I happened across a colorful
variety of high density EPS blocks for sale. Wondering if I could glue them
together and make an EPS blank, I bought a couple and glued them together. After
letting it dry for a week, I stressed the glue joint to see if it would break, but
it was rock solid…I knew I was in business.
So for the following month or so I scoured
the local Daiso stores buying up all their 40x5x5cm and 20x10x5cm EPS blocks. I
glued them into “boards”, cut foil profiles into them using a template, and
then glued them up into a blank (using three of the foil templates as stringers).
The board outline was cut, rough rail bands trimmed down, and a 12mm balsa rail
attached. The pics below show the progress so far, it’s coming together pretty
well. The rails need to be brought down and shaped a bit more, then I’ll be putting
a 3mm balsa veneer on the deck and bottom. The ultimate plan is for a 6’6” “jumbo”
single fin (6’6”x23.5x3.5)…fingers crossed…
In any regard, this is where I’m at, and
how I got here….updates to follow….
High density EPS blocks
Glued-up EPS "board" section
Placing EPS boards on foil template
Cutting to size with an Exacto blade (wish I had a hot wire system)
Cut foiled-shaped section
Glued-up blank
Outline cut, rail bands drawn
Balsa rails on preparing for balsa veneer
The waves have been small this July, but fun enough at Kako
Glassy Kako
Bigger day at Kako
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