Hey Noel! I surfed near you at Uppers this morning and didn't have a chance to tell you in person, so I thought I'd just say it here. Thank you! You provide such insane value to the surfing world, and are a natural leader. As a teacher, myself, I appreciate your positive insights and your wisdom that you share so generously. Just watching your videos has helped empower me with the knowledge to choose the right board, fin set-up (after trying out Used Surf's demo program), not to mention helping me understand how to improve my technique and work on turns, etc etc. Thanks again for all you offer us surfers!!
Hi Noel, this is pretty much spot on. I'm 160lbs and an advanced surfer of 20years +. Almost all my boards are now in the 29-30litre range. I spend 4-5months in 6mm hooded wetsuit and boots, 4-5months in 4mm rubber and 2-3months in 3mm. I live in the SW of the UK where the waves often have size but can lack power and shape so almost all my boards are medium to low rocker. I have found over many years that in average waves and cold water going right to the top of your range works best for me leaving the mid-low end for good waves and summer. If people are honest about thier ability I don't think they'll go far wrong using your method. Love your work. Total legend. 🤙🏻
Cheers and thank you for posting what works for you! Your post will help others have more confidence pulling the trigger on their board buying and trusting the Weight to Volume ratio formula.
Would be neat to test the same board at different literages and see how your surfing is affected. Especially a proven groveler like the Hydra... then try 25l, 30l, 35l all on the same day.
I would love this too for the purpose of seeing just how a board that is incorrectly sized truly impacts expert/pro level surfing. I bet that would be an extremely popular and lasting video. What would happen to Noel’s cutbacks/snaps/carves/wraps on a daily driver that is 3L too small? 3L too big? 6L too big?
Great video. I'm 57, and have been surfing for over 40yrs. I have been riding fun boards (7'-8'), but still am a short boarder at heart. This video will help me chose a board, so I can give a short board a go again. Very well done. Thank you.
Just wanted to mention how much I appreciate you showing clips of your surfing the board/fins you're talking about. It helps IMMENSELY to picture what you're saying when you talk about sort of intangible concepts of an experience like drive, flow, looseness, etc. Thanks for such an amazingly informative and entertaining channel!
Great content! I’m 40 at 195-200 lbs been surfing for 25 years and find in the winter with a 4/3 I like riding 38-40 liters the best. Funny because most of my boys think I’m way over gunned, but it just feels like I have sooooo much more fun and get endless waves when i ride what feels right. Having the ability to sit a couple feet past everyone, especially around the local Encinitas spots where there’s plenty of bigger boards, it just seems to be where I’ve been landing lately. Even when I surf blacks I find I like to have the additional liters. At a certain age we get to a place where we just go with what feels right, I guess that’s 40 for me lol. Anyhow, epic content man. Cheers from Encinitas.
I surfed my local reef break on a 29L, im 5"9 80kgs, when I moved to Bali for 6 months I really wanted to improve my surfing and everyone said I should try more volume so I go a couple 31-33, they definitely paddled for paddling against a crowd but in the end I went back to my 29L range and it just feels much better under my feet for turns/control. On the 5-7ft days I take out a 5"11 ghost and its around 29L but it just glides into any steepness.
Hey Noel, I really wanted to thank you for this video. It’s been a while since I bought my last board and in that time I’ve lost 20kgs. For some time now I’ve felt like my boards are all over volumed. I recently had an opportunity to pick up an ex demo 5’6 Machado Glazer following this formula it came just below what I thought I’d need now at 32L. I already had a 6’0 in the same model at 42L. I was a little nervous dropping so much size but I’ve had about 4-5 sessions on the new board now and I’ve noticed a massive improvement. Even taking it out on the weekend in some subpar conditions I felt it outperformed my 6’0 seaside even with paddle power and also felt it’s even improved my pop up . I’m now also considering sizing down my seaside to a 5’6 or even trying something new maybe like an Album Plasmic.
170lbs - 20 year surfer - 43 years old. 29.5L - 32L. Advanced surfer but no expert/pro that surfs mainly mushy So Cal waves. Ride flatter rocker boards and prefer short boards towards my lower volume range when waves get good. Fishy grovelers work better with a little more volume for me. Great video. Thanks!
This formula is spot on! Noel was super gracious, helping me dial in my optimal volume when I was purchasing my CI NB2. Purchased it from the Surf Station & once I got it in the water... It was mental!!! 💯🤙
Hey Noel, fantastic videos as always. I was thinking it'd be soooo interesting to see you surf the same board at different lieterages. For instance one version of the board 2-3 liters above you liter range, one version at your liter range and one version 2-3 liters below your liter range. Getting our liters right is a big question, and seeing the exact differences it makes when in the water, along with your commentary on the matter would be quite interesting.
Thanks Noel! I'm glad I followed the Mayhem formula on my new MR model. I've put on weight and am wearing a 4/3 suit. Thanks a lot for all that you do for us.
I'm coming in at 168lbs at 6ft. I'm surfing in cold Irish Waters in a 6,4 wetsuit, boots , hood & gloves. I'd put myself a intermediate / advanced. I find 33 - 36litres works well for me in the breaks i surf ( 5,10 groveller, short boards 5,11 -6,1 ). Mainly beach breaks that tend to be medium power. I've no doubt in warm water conditions i'd be on a 29-30 litre range. The extra volume helps with the extra rubber and the shorter times we can spend in the water.
Dude, I’ve been riding a 5’5 Seaside I bought about a month ago wondering if it was too small. I’m 51 now and have been surfing for about 32 years considering myself at an advanced level. Not expert or pro. At 5’10” and 170 - 175 lbs, I’ve surfed it in different spots and different conditions. Some places it’s too little volume at 31.5 and other places, it’s absolutely perfect. This board was made for a wave like Church. Then go out to a place up north like Steamer’s and I’m gonna really have trouble. Personally, I think the size of board and volume really depend on the spot you’re planning on surfing. SoCal waves require less foam than Santa Cruz, and Santa Cruz waves require less foam than Ocean Beach San Francisco. If I took Seaside out to Ocean Beach S.F., I’d probably have to get rescued if the waves got bigger than shoulder high!😂😂
I think you length of the board is important for the other wave spots your talking about. A longer board will go way better in bigger steeper waves. You will have more stability, and rail line to push off of. I would never take a 5’2” or 5’3” Seaside out in OB Frisco unless it was 1-2’ surf. That wave is powerful with lots of water moving around. It might be fun at 1-3’ Steamers or pleasure point though.
Hi, this video was what I need for a long time. Thank you for sharing. I’m one of your patreons and having great time with your surf better series from South Korea! Wish someday I can ses you in the water.
Yup, exactly in the range calculated for my skill level, thanks Noel! If only I had something like that 20 years ago...had boards from 27-38l back then and only by accident stumbled across a board in the ideal volume about 2004, but didn't really identify that volume was the main factor why it worked so well until 2015 or so haha! I'm 6'1.5 at 170lbs intermediate for life lol, used to 6ft+ boards from the 2000's and kinda feel like some boards are getting too short for me in stock dims these days. Stance seems a little off on those 5'5 sticks and rail line is so short, feels unstable at high speed! Helps me with placing the back foot correctly though...
Hey Noel, Just came across this video and your channel, thank you for all your time and efforts. I do wana run somethin by you. A little history, been fond of surfing for years. It’s been a life long dream since was a boy(now 37). I remember going out to Steamers Lane in Santa Cruz as a kid watching them surf for hours. Anyway… last year I went to Hawaii, for the first time(Waikiki). Of course I took a couple lessons and I have to say I nailed it. I didn’t think I’d take to it so fast, I was hooked. I ended up renting a board for the remaining 10days there and surfed on my own. It’s true, life is better when your surfing. So I come home and what do I do, I get a basic soft top with a lot of volume, not even sure how much. I’ve been out a half of dozen or so times but now I’m looking to purchase a real board. I guess it’s what they call a hybrid or fish style. I’m headed back to Hawaii (Maui) again this year and I want to bring my own ride. I’ve been eyeing a board by surf industries called the Modern Highline. Im 37, 5’8, about 195ish and I’d rate my fitness 6-7 outta 10. The board specs are 6'8" 22 7/8" 3" 55L FCSII Tri Performer Based on your video, I rounded up my weight to 200 and divided by 6 and added the 5-7 as I still consider myself a beginner. I came in at 40L. This Highline at 6’8 comes in at 55L. Is 55 too much or too little for a beginner still. us.surfindustries.com/products/highline-pu-mid-length-surfboard?variant=35742594662558
Thank you for doing this, this helps. I am a pretty big guy and I think this might skew a bit at higher weights. I go between 250 and 285 pounds and I notice my 47 liter PodMod 2 doesn't float me when well when about 270 and above. Age is probably a factor as I am 46 as well.
Hi Noel! Thanks a bunch for your content. I am a 2-3 board quiver guy so this topic is extremely important to me since I am always trying to maximize the range of conditions my boards can function well in. I really like what you said about the liters vs the dims because it really does make a huge amount of difference. The concave, foil, fin setup, tail shape, tail and nose thickness and wide point are all part of the picture when dialing this in. Not to mention wave type and surfing style. I could see this topic going into several episodes. I have only been able to get little pieces of this type of info from watching shapers talk about their boards and why they shaped it the way they did. Cheers and hope to see you out there someday! We would love to see you down in C-bad!
Always so instructive pieces of information talking simply about so many parameters. One thing: you would ask all those boards makers to add the projected surface distribution aside of the volume in litres. That surface in cm2 would be a great parameter to know about the real range of the board out of its usual dims. Thanks again!
Divide kgs by 2,72 to get the same result! Nice tip Noel, the only thing is not every board has volume marked on it. I have started shaping boards not so long ago and most of the time people are only interested about litres as a combination of all the specks of the board which is wrong! a 26L 5'9 is totally diferent then a 26L 5'6.
I agree but only DIMS don't work anymore either and I love the combo of both DIMS and Liters. These are both tools to give us surfers piece of mind that a board will work well for us.
Concerning the volume, it is not only a factor of pro, advanced, or beginner…Age is a great factor. I used to surf 37 litres, for 232 pounds, until I was 45. Then, I had to increase the volume every two years. Today, at 58, I’m still enjoying shortboards, but with 48 liters(Dominator 6’8…).
Riding on a fast beach break spot, I can relate and agree to this video as my friend advise me to go to 5'5 while I had a very good feeling on his 5'7 Holygrail. I did not regret it at all! I am 127 pounds with an intermediate level -> 24.3 L as per formula and guess what... 5'5 Holygrail is 24.45 L! I have to paddle more but the manoeuvers are more radical. Regarding your dedicated video on this board, great choice on KA FCS II fins :-). My high range is the Go Fish 5'5 with 29 L. Again, for this board, great choice on especial captain fins. Thanks again for your work, high quality videos and very wise advices, especially on fins. I really did not pay attention on this section and it really change the game! Yewwwww
Spot on! I havent actually used a calculation before but this is exactly what I have been riding as I progressed (75kg 34.5L as intermediate, down to 32 when I felt the 34.5 didnt wrap around as fast as I would have liked and now at 31)
@@andress639 I was only surfing about 2 months in summer and 2 weeks in winter but I was on my 34.5L board for 4 years before I felt that it was slowing me down. But even now I think that I could ride that board and only feel like it's a bit too big on 1 in 10 turns.
me as a 5'9 115-120 lbs guy . i guess custom orders will be my only option if i want something at my size and volume to evolve further as stocks dims at my size have always too much volume , and boards at my volume are always microscopic
I'm 5'9" with long arms and legs. The trouble I'm having in 2022 is that the shapers stock dims for my weight come in short length boards. I prefer 5'10, 5'11" to 6'1" range for my standard shortboard. I have a 5'6" and my legs are so long the board is just too short, for me to get the proper liters I'd have to actually drop down in length when I want to jump up. I'm not surfing waves that break consistently in the same spot so I have to hunt and position for take off, prefer the longer length boards.
Hey Noel. You are without a doubt the best surfboard reviewer on RUclips! Need some of your advise here please... bit of a long one so bear with me. I am an experienced fit surfer at 180lbs, I have always rode smaller boards for my weight. Current quiver is... 6'0 X 18 7/8 JS Monster8 round tail - 28l. 5'11 x 19 DHD DX1 squash 28l 5'10 x 19 1/4 Lost Sub Driver 2.0 EPS - 29l I like small changes between each board with dimensions so the transition from board to board is easier. Question is... I'm after a grovel board for 1-3ft fat gutless surf. I don't really want to go to a full-on retro fish with round nose if possible. What is the best performance fish you have tried?? I want something fast that has heaps of glide over fat sections, not worried if it won't surf in the pocket. I'm thinking something like an Astro Pop or Swordfish would be on the money... any other suggestions? Thanks for any info.
Always felt the magic happens at around 36 for me . I’m a terrible surfer . Keeping changing boards that is why probably . But when I up that board and get greedy thinking I will be catching more waves .. something is just off and I start feel that extra floatation as a hinder
Hey noel, I appreciate your method for calculating the volume but, those of us who surf in the Mediterranean in weaker waves, probably need to add a little more volume to the surfboards.
@@meironcohen8280 Factor in 1 more liter to your range. I’m sure other folks that surf really cold weather with lots of rubber need to add some volume too. This is just a good guide… a starting point.
Hi Noel, very good exercise you have there. Actually, what you say at the end is what I notice a lot: When it comes to winter time (because of the 4/3 and of the cold in general) I wish I could add one extra liter to my NB2 since it looks like I get more "stuck" to get waves. The Volume Calculator you have at the Pukas site is also quite interesting
Great review Noel! Spot on with litre range, im 5.7, 135 pounds, I’m currently riding a pyzel phantom 5.7 with 26.7 litres, I think the board is the perfect litre range for me as a intermediate/advance surfer but I want to go in the 25litre range, should I go down or stay within the 26-27 litre? Thanks.
You can absolutely go less volume... maybe 24-25L. Start at 25L and work your way further into the Advanced level. The 26.7L could be what’s hindering you from progressing into the Advanced level on a regular basis. I say keep your Phantom at 26.7L and go down at least 25.5L and see how that goes first. If it feels excellent then sell the 5’7” and grab a Groveler at 25L and you will be amazed at your quickness from rail to rail.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 thank you for the reply, yea, I was the guy who asked for the size differences for the black baron as that’s the next board I’m thinking of getting very soon.
After five years of not surfing I got a 6’3 21” 2.75” 39 liters. I’m 6’5 225 and figured this would be good for me. In the past I had surfed skinnier 6’6s and plenty of 5’11-6’1 retro twin fins. I took it out and had a hard time catching anything. You think it’s my weight? Everytime I finally got into it by paddling with all my power I was already too far behind the face. Really frustrating. Not sure if I should just sell it and get something else
Your weight and skill level volume ranges. Pro/Expert = 36-38L Advanced = 38-40L Intermediate = 41-43L If you are out of surfing shape then I suggest 43-45L. Sell the board you got and try again. Or buy a new one and work your way down to that one.
Another awesome and very useful video from this channel. One question: Is it usefull to consider / Do you consider the eventual effect of the wetsuit weight?? For example, a difference of 5 pounds would change almost a liter using the formula. Tks!
I answered that question at the end of this episode...... Go up 1L for every 8-10 lb you gain or go down 1L for every 8-10 lb you loose. Adding rubber will add weight....
I always seen the charts saying I should go less L. But 27L on my style of Hawaii boards makes it bog because of rocker. I’m 165 and that means 27.5 divided by 6. Currently on a 27.6L Monsta box eps and it could be smaller so I just ride head high surf. But my big wave boards still get the under arm test haha
Hi Noel, another awesome video with so much insightful information. Using your formula for a intermediate surfer my volume is 28 litres. I’ve got a 5’6 (29.5L)HP Puddle Jumper which is great in 1-3ft beachies I surf. I’ve got a 5’10 (30L) Phantom which feels a little big since riding the Jumper unless it’s 4ft+. What board would you recommend for 2-4ft beachies? Cheers
57 yo at 160 lbs, with an effed shoulder, but still want to shortboard. Local shaper suggested I go 6'6", at about 40 liters, for winter waves up here in norcal (it's been overhead to doh every day the past month). Haven't surfed a 6'6" since the Clark foam days, so kinda freaking out...but the shaper has 40 years exp.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 was 6'1" years ago, but last time I measured 5'11"...maybe did it wrong. Yes, waves up here can have hawaii power, depending on the spot.
I assume you get this a lot from punters like me, but I am 210lbs and bought a 6'0 stock Firewire Seaside (before watching your video). I don't know where I am on the skill spectrum since I don't know what defines beginner Vs intermediate, but I go out everyday if there is a wave, have zero trouble catching waves and getting up and ride along the face happily in either direction. Starting to get into cutbacks, bottom turns and proper pumping. If I assume I am in the beginner/intermediate zone, then I do (210/6)+(5 or 7). Which brings me to 40-42L. The 6'0 seaside is 44.8L. It does feel like a bit of a stretch under the arm in terms of thickness and width and gets slappy on faster waves (more on top of the water rather than sitting in). I am wondering if I should go with the 5'11 instead? It is 41.1L and felt much more comfortable holding it in the shop. Note also it is EPS. The only reason I didn't get it was because I was unsure about going that short (I am 6'5). Since it is a groveller board, should I just stick with the added volume of my 6'0 or would it be worth switching to the 5'11?
You could easily ride the 5’11”. The 5’11 will offer more sensitivity and your turns will be quicker and sharper. Either way if the 6’0” feels good then no reason to buy the 5’11”.
Hi Noel, great content as always. I weight 90kgs (198lbs) and usually ride 32-33L eps boards for daily drivers and grovelers. I am looking to buy a mini step up, maybe the twin pin ci but I am not sure how much Ls should I add for being a step up and a PU. Tended to go for a 6’3 but afraid 38L may be too much? I surf mainly point breaks when gets big. Cheers!
It really depends on how big the waves are and how hollow the wave is too. For me a mini step up is a couple inches longer from my 5’7” (27L)HPSB… so I go 5’9” and maybe add 1L to (28L) for bigger waves here in So Cal. If I’m in HI I might ride a 5’11” at 29L. Now for waves like Sunset and Ocean Beach it’s looks a lot different in board length and volume. I say go up to 35-36L for your step up if the wave is not heavy
@@surfnshowreviews7777 excellent, thanks! I live in the surf coast in Australia, riding mostly at Bells when gets decent. Wave is not that heavy but some strong rips do require extra foam. Cheers, Noel!
I’m 222lb, 5’8 and 58 yo. Won a comp in doh+ surf once - longtime ago 😂 Recently bought a 6’1 Glazer at around 45L. It’s the perfect fit for an older, heavier guy - paddles in well but turns quickly in short arcs - previous boards 6’4 so the contrast is very noticeable. Seems like past a certain weight you need something substantial to keep you on top of the water... kinda like mosquitoes vs frogs 😂
Needed this vid badly Noel...im 155 LBs looking to go to 160+ soon lol, I'm 6ft, and I'm an int-adv quickly advancing as im surfing everyday almost all day. Pretty fit, workout and surf daily. I haven't had too many short boards ever and i cant seem to figure out my right dims.. I had a 6'1 driver 2.0 and the rails felt a tiny bit too thick and the board felt also just a tad bit too wide. (6,1,19.38, 2,45 are the dims). Im thinking about going with stock dims on the fever but is it worth to go a tiny bit down in custom dims and wait that 4-month timeframe?? Hopefully, you can let me know if you think i should go custom dims up or down from 6'0 stock or maybe i should just buy a 6'0 stock and it be fine! Sorry for the paragraph just need some guidance before i put in a order and wait too long or buy a stock board that doesn't fit right. Thanks for the review! ps I'm in an A-class ventura county surf spot as my home break for reference of what waves ill be riding.
The Fever is epic.... if the Stock 6’ hits your liter range then no need to go custom. I suggest getting into your local shop to feel up a stock 6’ Fever and see how the board feels under your arm.
I generally struggle with dimensions on boards. I am intermediate and fairly light for my weight. I love the control and manoeuvreability I get from boards at the bottom end of the litre range but then struggle with my wave count. I pump up the volume to the upper end and catch waves but struggle with the rails being too thick and takes me a while to get control over the board. I practice as much as I can for my location but is there anything you would suggest on length, width, thickness to overcome? Or just practice more 😊
Go more in the middle of you liter range. The low end might be to low and the high side of your liter range sounds to high. Find middle ground on volume and work it out.
Another great Video Noel. Would be great to see part 2 - Dial in your Litres for step ups. I always struggle with a step up, Im in Australia, 99% of the time I'm surfing knee to shoulder height waves. Surfing boards mostly between 5'3" and 5'11" in the 28 - 30 ltr range. When it comes to getting a board made for Bali like a 6'6" the extra length obvs adds more volume. So I struggle with thickness...do I go the same thickness as say a 5'9" or do I go thinner due to the extra length and volume, or maybe the answer is simpler than that? cheers
@@marcusdavis2208 I will add length first then scale scale thickness accordingly. Good example... if my HPSB is 5’9” x 18 7/8 x 2 5/16 at 26L then my mini step up is 5’11” 18 1/2 x 2 5/16 27L. The thickness might change or not.... the volume will change by length. I would get on a website like CI and mess with custom dims on my step up to get my liters right.
Some of my older friends like to add 1-2L extra for age and I think that’s great. It’s really a preference of feel underfoot and what you want to achieve in your surfing. If catching waves at a competitive surf spot is most important to you then by all means add some foam. For me.... I like my boards more responsive so I will work harder paddling for quicker reaction time on my boards. Even though I’m 48 years old.
Thanks for your response. I did liters up when I was getting back into surfing after an injury. But now that I’m back in shape I don’t think I need the extra foam. I can feel it when coming off the bottom or addressing the lip, etc. Btw I’m 186lbs , 5’11” advanced. Was riding boards around 34L after the injury. After watching your video I realized I need 32 to 32.5.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 You look and surf great for 48 years old.. I had the same question as I'm 52 years of age so thanks for that. Also... Would you add 1-2 liters if you only get out every 3 months or so.. I live 7 hours from the coast and pretty much have to plan mini vacations to be able to surf. I have myself at 42.33 liters using your calculations at beg/int (former intermediate because it's been many years) and that's including an extra 2 liters added to account for the all the neoprene needed on the Oregon Coast. My current board is an old 6'9" Canyon that is probably around 38.5 liters. I'm just not sure how much to add.. Make it 42 or make it 45? Curious as to your thoughts.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 Thanks Noel.. I was looing at the Hypto in a 6'6" or 6'4"... Looks like a fun versatile shape. I would rather go as short as possible so I appreciate the advice. It was either that or a Firewire Evo. Are you still planning on reviewing the Hypto? The community appreciates you man. Been getting on a SmoothStar trying to get the legs under me using some of your training videos.
How many pounds does a 5/4 wetsuit put on you? That's what I wear from December till April here in NY...I would say I'm an experienced intermediate who rides a shortboards anywhere between 32-35 liters...wondering if I should boost a few liters in the winter to get more speed (I'm 6'1 ~182 pounds with no suit on). Awesome review btw
I would say a 5/4 would add roughly 10-12 lbs. A good liter range for someone your weight surfing in trunks looks like this. Pro/Expert level = 29.5-31.5L Advanced = 32.5-33.5 Intermediate = 34.5-36.5L Wearing your 5/4 adds roughly 1-1.5L the point of having a liter range is your high end should cover the extra weight of your winter suit. Some guys add 2L for winter rubber like your wearing.... it’s really all preference. I hope this helps and makes sense.
Hey Noel as usual a great video and spot on for me thank you so much!!!...my question is about litres for my step up - I surf a driver 2.0 6'1" at 30.3 litres I'm 176 pounds advanced surfer so my ideal litres by your formula is exactly that board, and I love the board although lately Ive been feeling that given the proformance 5oz s cloth construction which makes the board so light, I could go to the 6'0' at 29l...anyway, back to my question, how do I litre size my step up? Should I have the same litres as my normal shortboard, or add 10% roughly or what? I surf the driver 2.0 up to OH like 5 foot, when its 6 foot DOH I have to nurse the bottom turn a bit which is definitely holding me back....And further to this, would you recommend a pyzel ghost (I would get custom as I want at least 6'3" and dont like wide boards) over a lost step driver at similar dims and litres? I should add I would mostly surf the step up on not so hollow more slabby powerful wave like bells
Hi Noel. Hope you have a great 2021 and thanksfor the tip. Matching the range with the outline and bottom contour of the board is what is not entirely clear to me. If you have less rocker and this equals better paddling, why adding a littler? Why not adding littlers for High performance PU?
Noel thanks so much for this video as well as all of your other content! I was hoping to clarify how you define Advanced or Intermediate- Ive been surfing 10+ years, do snaps (not 100% 12 o'clock vert)/cutbacks/floaters but no fins out and no airs, how many liters onto the base calculation should I add?
@@surfnshowreviews7777171 lb/6'2, daily driver is a JS BB3 hyfi in 5'11 which is 32.1 liters. Time for a replacement and thinking Dom2 - figure that the 5'9 is probably best? Should that paddle similar enough to the BB3 (even tho 0.6l less)? Thanks!
That means @ 174 pounds I can aim for 29 litres.... that means the Christenson fish stock 5’4 is the correct sizing for me. This video was right on time for me as my board was just delivered today.. thank you!
Hi Noel! I want to buy the Dominator 2. So do I get it right? I´m about 181 LB. Divided by 6 plus 3 (Intermediate) it would be about 33l. So the 5´10 would be a good choice? I´m riding the Dominator 2 already in 5´4 on a standing wave. But I´m not sure about the volume for the ocean.
Hey Noel! I appreciate all of the work here and education being passed along. Had a quick question regarding this topic. I am 6’2 and weigh about 220. Goal is to get back to a solid 210 and the work has begun there. I’m probably on the low end intermediate level and have been looking at getting a higher performance daily driver for places like Blacks/Ocean Beach/Imperial Beach. What would you recommend for liters and board? I’ve been looking at the Phantom and Pyzalien 2 as well as the Happy from CI. Just kinda lost. Thanks for any help you can provide! Please keep doing what you’re doing.
I’m thinking 43-45 liters and I suggest the Hypto Krypto or CI Weirdo Ripper. The Hypto Krypto will paddle better and still have good hold in bigger waves like Blacks. The Weirdo Ripper needs a wave to go good but it’s packed with foam and it will go good at your breaks.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 you do get right back to your folks! Thank you. I actually have an Ultra Joe at about 45.5L. I think I’m going to just stick with that and get better there. I’ve been favoring the CI Mid at 7’6, but it’s time to dial in the Joe. Thank you!
Noel does too much volume ever hinder catching waves? Could it potentially make the wave roll under you, or is it really just a matter of sacrificed performance?
When will we see a "Salas Designs" boards? With all that knowledge and experience trying all sorts of shapes/brands, I think you could design some great boards. 💯🏄♂️🤘
Hey Noel! Do you take into account the weight of the wetsuit for the Weight/6 formula? or we should add it, if you always surf in a 4/3 or 5/4mm wetsuit. thanks
I trust Noel Salas more than anyone in the water but Idk I think a lot depends on your ability to paddle and take off deep. I'm roughly 200lbs and anymore than 30L and things feel corky. I see so many folks 185lbs saying they are on 35L boards and I'm thinking you need to paddle harder. I guess volume in the nose and the rocker play a good part in this decision.
Hey Noel, I hope you can help me ! I’m 6 foot tall and 160 pounds. I want to buy the seaside for spring to autumn waves in the south west of France ! I just don’t really know which dimensions I should get... I’m an intermediate/advanced surfer and hesitating between the 5.4 and the 5.5. Hope you can help me ! Keep doing what you’re doing ! You’re the best ;)
Hi Noel and thank you for your clips! Just to make sure I understand what you’re saying correctly, this mean that as a 162lbs beginner my volume range should roughly be between 32L and 34L. That seems a bit low doesn’t it?
Now that I have my liter range, how should I decide the length? I'm 5'6.5, 160lb. I'm looking at 5 different boards ranging from 5'6 to 5'10 with 30l each (daily driver and grovelers) Any ideas!?! thanks appreciate it!
@@finao8231 The length can depend on the board category and your skill level too. What is your skill level? What are the waves like at your home break? What are the board Dimensions and volume of your favorite board right now for your home break?
@@surfnshowreviews7777 I'm an intermediate riding mushy 2-3ft waves but determined to progress into good overhead hallow 4-6 North Shore, Oahu. Got my eyes on pyzel 5'7 gremlin, 5'6 white tiger, 5'10 phantom, 5'9 pyzelien 2 and 5'9 mini ghost. I kinda want the one with the best paddle power, fast and can rip on waves waist high to overhead. Narrowest 19 3/8 widest 19 7/8 and all around same thickness 2.5
Hey Noel, I'm an intermediate surfer 6'-0", ~190lbs mostly surfing the south shore of Oahu usually about 4-6' hawaiian size.. I'm coming off an 8'-0" funboard and looking to transition to a smaller daily driver board that I can learn more turns and technical surfing on. Can you recommend any boards, sizes, volumes to look for? I've been looking at the Machado fish and Pyzalien 2.
The transition can be difficult as the shorter boards will feel very responsive and a bit unstable. I think a good place to start your way down in size and volume is roughly 38-40L. I think as you get comfortable on the shorter board you can scale the volume down a bit more and end up on 35-37L. I suggest the Pyzalien 2 fin f the waves are hollow 4-6’ HI style.... if your surfing waves that have size but aren’t heavy then I suggest the Seaside. The Seaside paddles better, it’s faster, and it will be more stable due to it being wider.
Hey Noel! I surfed near you at Uppers this morning and didn't have a chance to tell you in person, so I thought I'd just say it here. Thank you! You provide such insane value to the surfing world, and are a natural leader. As a teacher, myself, I appreciate your positive insights and your wisdom that you share so generously. Just watching your videos has helped empower me with the knowledge to choose the right board, fin set-up (after trying out Used Surf's demo program), not to mention helping me understand how to improve my technique and work on turns, etc etc. Thanks again for all you offer us surfers!!
Stoked... cheers for the kind words. Please introduce yourself next time you see me out surfing.
Used Surf’s demo program rocks
Hi Noel, this is pretty much spot on. I'm 160lbs and an advanced surfer of 20years +. Almost all my boards are now in the 29-30litre range. I spend 4-5months in 6mm hooded wetsuit and boots, 4-5months in 4mm rubber and 2-3months in 3mm. I live in the SW of the UK where the waves often have size but can lack power and shape so almost all my boards are medium to low rocker. I have found over many years that in average waves and cold water going right to the top of your range works best for me leaving the mid-low end for good waves and summer. If people are honest about thier ability I don't think they'll go far wrong using your method. Love your work. Total legend. 🤙🏻
Cheers and thank you for posting what works for you! Your post will help others have more confidence pulling the trigger on their board buying and trusting the Weight to Volume ratio formula.
Go the Cornish...
Would be neat to test the same board at different literages and see how your surfing is affected. Especially a proven groveler like the Hydra... then try 25l, 30l, 35l all on the same day.
agreed
This would be awesome to see Noel!
I would love this too for the purpose of seeing just how a board that is incorrectly sized truly impacts expert/pro level surfing. I bet that would be an extremely popular and lasting video. What would happen to Noel’s cutbacks/snaps/carves/wraps on a daily driver that is 3L too small? 3L too big? 6L too big?
Good idea 👍
Would love to see it
Great video. I'm 57, and have been surfing for over 40yrs. I have been riding fun boards (7'-8'), but still am a short boarder at heart.
This video will help me chose a board, so I can give a short board a go again. Very well done. Thank you.
Just wanted to mention how much I appreciate you showing clips of your surfing the board/fins you're talking about. It helps IMMENSELY to picture what you're saying when you talk about sort of intangible concepts of an experience like drive, flow, looseness, etc.
Thanks for such an amazingly informative and entertaining channel!
i trust Noel with my money, i trust Noel with everything.
Cheers
I dunno man. My wife watches more Noel than I do!! Hey Salas, back off!!
@@jayeasty1 Classic!!!
Just rewatched the Cymatic review and I realized how much the production quality has increased. Thanks, Noel!
Great content! I’m 40 at 195-200 lbs been surfing for 25 years and find in the winter with a 4/3 I like riding 38-40 liters the best. Funny because most of my boys think I’m way over gunned, but it just feels like I have sooooo much more fun and get endless waves when i ride what feels right. Having the ability to sit a couple feet past everyone, especially around the local Encinitas spots where there’s plenty of bigger boards, it just seems to be where I’ve been landing lately. Even when I surf blacks I find I like to have the additional liters. At a certain age we get to a place where we just go with what feels right, I guess that’s 40 for me lol. Anyhow, epic content man. Cheers from Encinitas.
I surfed my local reef break on a 29L, im 5"9 80kgs, when I moved to Bali for 6 months I really wanted to improve my surfing and everyone said I should try more volume so I go a couple 31-33, they definitely paddled for paddling against a crowd but in the end I went back to my 29L range and it just feels much better under my feet for turns/control. On the 5-7ft days I take out a 5"11 ghost and its around 29L but it just glides into any steepness.
Hey Noel, I really wanted to thank you for this video. It’s been a while since I bought my last board and in that time I’ve lost 20kgs. For some time now I’ve felt like my boards are all over volumed. I recently had an opportunity to pick up an ex demo 5’6 Machado Glazer following this formula it came just below what I thought I’d need now at 32L. I already had a 6’0 in the same model at 42L. I was a little nervous dropping so much size but I’ve had about 4-5 sessions on the new board now and I’ve noticed a massive improvement.
Even taking it out on the weekend in some subpar conditions I felt it outperformed my 6’0 seaside even with paddle power and also felt it’s even improved my pop up .
I’m now also considering sizing down my seaside to a 5’6 or even trying something new maybe like an Album Plasmic.
170lbs - 20 year surfer - 43 years old. 29.5L - 32L. Advanced surfer but no expert/pro that surfs mainly mushy So Cal waves. Ride flatter rocker boards and prefer short boards towards my lower volume range when waves get good. Fishy grovelers work better with a little more volume for me. Great video. Thanks!
This formula is spot on! Noel was super gracious, helping me dial in my optimal volume when I was purchasing my CI NB2. Purchased it from the Surf Station & once I got it in the water... It was mental!!! 💯🤙
i've been surfing 35L for ages. today i tried an 31.5 that it felt sick. came home and watched this video and guess what...your formula nailed it.
Yewww!!!
Hey Noel, fantastic videos as always. I was thinking it'd be soooo interesting to see you surf the same board at different lieterages. For instance one version of the board 2-3 liters above you liter range, one version at your liter range and one version 2-3 liters below your liter range. Getting our liters right is a big question, and seeing the exact differences it makes when in the water, along with your commentary on the matter would be quite interesting.
I will do a Surf Tip like this soon...
@@surfnshowreviews7777 Awesome! Can't wait
Keep it simple and have fun. Great piece of advice!
Thanks Noel! I'm glad I followed the Mayhem formula on my new MR model. I've put on weight and am wearing a 4/3 suit. Thanks a lot for all that you do for us.
This calculation works for me. 5'10" 185lb and 32 liters is my hot spot. Dialing it in.
Great post!!! What’s your skill level so others can relate? Thanks
@@surfnshowreviews7777 Surfing 30 plus year and have surfed boards from 4’0”-11ft. Love your show, see you in the water.
Noel - Thank you for all of your videos and reviews. You are my go to for all things surfing. Many thanks!
Btw Noel those HP keels works great with my 5’-8” Steve Morgan “74” fish. Fins always humming 😄
I'm coming in at 168lbs at 6ft. I'm surfing in cold Irish Waters in a 6,4 wetsuit, boots , hood & gloves. I'd put myself a intermediate / advanced. I find 33 - 36litres works well for me in the breaks i surf ( 5,10 groveller, short boards 5,11 -6,1 ). Mainly beach breaks that tend to be medium power. I've no doubt in warm water conditions i'd be on a 29-30 litre range. The extra volume helps with the extra rubber and the shorter times we can spend in the water.
Great post!! Thanks... your info will help others.
Dude, I’ve been riding a 5’5 Seaside I bought about a month ago wondering if it was too small. I’m 51 now and have been surfing for about 32 years considering myself at an advanced level. Not expert or pro. At 5’10” and 170 - 175 lbs, I’ve surfed it in different spots and different conditions. Some places it’s too little volume at 31.5 and other places, it’s absolutely perfect. This board was made for a wave like Church. Then go out to a place up north like Steamer’s and I’m gonna really have trouble. Personally, I think the size of board and volume really depend on the spot you’re planning on surfing. SoCal waves require less foam than Santa Cruz, and Santa Cruz waves require less foam than Ocean Beach San Francisco. If I took Seaside out to Ocean Beach S.F., I’d probably have to get rescued if the waves got bigger than shoulder high!😂😂
I think you length of the board is important for the other wave spots your talking about. A longer board will go way better in bigger steeper waves. You will have more stability, and rail line to push off of. I would never take a 5’2” or 5’3” Seaside out in OB Frisco unless it was 1-2’ surf. That wave is powerful with lots of water moving around.
It might be fun at 1-3’ Steamers or pleasure point though.
Hi, this video was what I need for a long time. Thank you for sharing.
I’m one of your patreons and having great time with your surf better series from South Korea!
Wish someday I can ses you in the water.
Yewww!! Stoked to hear our tutorials are helping you. Cheers
Yup, exactly in the range calculated for my skill level, thanks Noel!
If only I had something like that 20 years ago...had boards from 27-38l back then and only by accident stumbled across a board in the ideal volume about 2004, but didn't really identify that volume was the main factor why it worked so well until 2015 or so haha!
I'm 6'1.5 at 170lbs intermediate for life lol, used to 6ft+ boards from the 2000's and kinda feel like some boards are getting too short for me in stock dims these days. Stance seems a little off on those 5'5 sticks and rail line is so short, feels unstable at high speed! Helps me with placing the back foot correctly though...
your the man Noel!!! Love the videos, my favorite yt channel. Keep it up!!! greetings from Brazil
best of the best Noel in every review. Thanks! cheers
Hey Noel,
Just came across this video and your channel, thank you for all your time and efforts. I do wana run somethin by you. A little history, been fond of surfing for years. It’s been a life long dream since was a boy(now 37). I remember going out to Steamers Lane in Santa Cruz as a kid watching them surf for hours. Anyway… last year I went to Hawaii, for the first time(Waikiki). Of course I took a couple lessons and I have to say I nailed it. I didn’t think I’d take to it so fast, I was hooked. I ended up renting a board for the remaining 10days there and surfed on my own. It’s true, life is better when your surfing. So I come home and what do I do, I get a basic soft top with a lot of volume, not even sure how much. I’ve been out a half of dozen or so times but now I’m looking to purchase a real board. I guess it’s what they call a hybrid or fish style. I’m headed back to Hawaii (Maui) again this year and I want to bring my own ride. I’ve been eyeing a board by surf industries called the Modern Highline. Im 37, 5’8, about 195ish and I’d rate my fitness 6-7 outta 10. The board specs are
6'8"
22 7/8"
3"
55L
FCSII Tri Performer
Based on your video, I rounded up my weight to 200 and divided by 6 and added the 5-7 as I still consider myself a beginner. I came in at 40L. This Highline at 6’8 comes in at 55L. Is 55 too much or too little for a beginner still.
us.surfindustries.com/products/highline-pu-mid-length-surfboard?variant=35742594662558
I say keep it fun and go for more foam. Get the 55L board and catch more waves and make easy to stand up on. Foam is your friend right now…
Thank you for doing this, this helps. I am a pretty big guy and I think this might skew a bit at higher weights. I go between 250 and 285 pounds and I notice my 47 liter PodMod 2 doesn't float me when well when about 270 and above. Age is probably a factor as I am 46 as well.
Hi Noel! Thanks a bunch for your content. I am a 2-3 board quiver guy so this topic is extremely important to me since I am always trying to maximize the range of conditions my boards can function well in. I really like what you said about the liters vs the dims because it really does make a huge amount of difference. The concave, foil, fin setup, tail shape, tail and nose thickness and wide point are all part of the picture when dialing this in. Not to mention wave type and surfing style. I could see this topic going into several episodes. I have only been able to get little pieces of this type of info from watching shapers talk about their boards and why they shaped it the way they did. Cheers and hope to see you out there someday! We would love to see you down in C-bad!
Cheers for the kind words and I agree with your comments. I love Carlsbad... I will see you there soon.
Thank you Noel 🙏 always the best advice
Really good clip mate, easily the best breakdown i've seen of the whole volume / dimensions/ ability equation. Well done :)
Great vídeo thanks, as an older man (on it's 50'). I guess we could add a 1 - or 2 liter extra for every decade after the 20'. What do you think?
@@ConsciousMovementsS Sounds good to me
Always so instructive pieces of information talking simply about so many parameters. One thing: you would ask all those boards makers to add the projected surface distribution aside of the volume in litres. That surface in cm2 would be a great parameter to know about the real range of the board out of its usual dims. Thanks again!
This dude is sik only just stumbled on his page. Happy days
Divide kgs by 2,72 to get the same result! Nice tip Noel, the only thing is not every board has volume marked on it. I have started shaping boards not so long ago and most of the time people are only interested about litres as a combination of all the specks of the board which is wrong! a 26L 5'9 is totally diferent then a 26L 5'6.
I agree but only DIMS don't work anymore either and I love the combo of both DIMS and Liters. These are both tools to give us surfers piece of mind that a board will work well for us.
Good content here … spot on with the calculations. Thanks ! 🤙🏼
This is spot on with what I’ve been doing, the formula now confirms it. Thanks!!!
Concerning the volume, it is not only a factor of pro, advanced, or beginner…Age is a great factor. I used to surf 37 litres, for 232 pounds, until I was 45. Then, I had to increase the volume every two years. Today, at 58, I’m still enjoying shortboards, but with 48 liters(Dominator 6’8…).
Riding on a fast beach break spot, I can relate and agree to this video as my friend advise me to go to 5'5 while I had a very good feeling on his 5'7 Holygrail. I did not regret it at all! I am 127 pounds with an intermediate level -> 24.3 L as per formula and guess what... 5'5 Holygrail is 24.45 L! I have to paddle more but the manoeuvers are more radical. Regarding your dedicated video on this board, great choice on KA FCS II fins :-). My high range is the Go Fish 5'5 with 29 L. Again, for this board, great choice on especial captain fins. Thanks again for your work, high quality videos and very wise advices, especially on fins. I really did not pay attention on this section and it really change the game! Yewwwww
Cheers!!! Thank you for posting
this rule was bang on for me!
Spot on! I havent actually used a calculation before but this is exactly what I have been riding as I progressed (75kg 34.5L as intermediate, down to 32 when I felt the 34.5 didnt wrap around as fast as I would have liked and now at 31)
How long did it take you to reach the 31L one? I am also 75kg and want to buy a 31L, I am intermediate-advance and have been surfing for about 2 years
@@andress639 I was only surfing about 2 months in summer and 2 weeks in winter but I was on my 34.5L board for 4 years before I felt that it was slowing me down. But even now I think that I could ride that board and only feel like it's a bit too big on 1 in 10 turns.
@@robarnoldbik8014 Thanks! much appreciate it
me as a 5'9 115-120 lbs guy . i guess custom orders will be my only option if i want something at my size and volume to evolve further as stocks dims at my size have always too much volume , and boards at my volume are always microscopic
I'm 5'9" with long arms and legs. The trouble I'm having in 2022 is that the shapers stock dims for my weight come in short length boards. I prefer 5'10, 5'11" to 6'1" range for my standard shortboard. I have a 5'6" and my legs are so long the board is just too short, for me to get the proper liters I'd have to actually drop down in length when I want to jump up. I'm not surfing waves that break consistently in the same spot so I have to hunt and position for take off, prefer the longer length boards.
Hey Noel. You are without a doubt the best surfboard reviewer on RUclips!
Need some of your advise here please... bit of a long one so bear with me.
I am an experienced fit surfer at 180lbs, I have always rode smaller boards for my weight.
Current quiver is...
6'0 X 18 7/8 JS Monster8 round tail - 28l.
5'11 x 19 DHD DX1 squash 28l
5'10 x 19 1/4 Lost Sub Driver 2.0 EPS - 29l
I like small changes between each board with dimensions so the transition from board to board is easier.
Question is... I'm after a grovel board for 1-3ft fat gutless surf. I don't really want to go to a full-on retro fish with round nose if possible.
What is the best performance fish you have tried?? I want something fast that has heaps of glide over fat sections, not worried if it won't surf in the pocket. I'm thinking something like an Astro Pop or Swordfish would be on the money... any other suggestions?
Thanks for any info.
I like the Fishbeard and Astro POP best for what You want. Astro POP might have a bit more glide
Always felt the magic happens at around 36 for me . I’m a terrible surfer . Keeping changing boards that is why probably . But when I up that board and get greedy thinking I will be catching more waves .. something is just off and I start feel that extra floatation as a hinder
Agreed… that happens to me too
Dude that was just what I needed to hear, thanks for sharing!
Hey noel, I appreciate your method for calculating the volume but, those of us who surf in the Mediterranean in weaker waves, probably need to add a little more volume to the surfboards.
@@meironcohen8280 Factor in 1 more liter to your range. I’m sure other folks that surf really cold weather with lots of rubber need to add some volume too. This is just a good guide… a starting point.
Great Stuff - Thanks!!
Hi Noel, very good exercise you have there. Actually, what you say at the end is what I notice a lot: When it comes to winter time (because of the 4/3 and of the cold in general) I wish I could add one extra liter to my NB2 since it looks like I get more "stuck" to get waves.
The Volume Calculator you have at the Pukas site is also quite interesting
Got my favorite drink sitting back
Excellent video. Keep rippin.
Right on Noel! Keep the vids comin!
Great review Noel! Spot on with litre range, im 5.7, 135 pounds, I’m currently riding a pyzel phantom 5.7 with 26.7 litres, I think the board is the perfect litre range for me as a intermediate/advance surfer but I want to go in the 25litre range, should I go down or stay within the 26-27 litre? Thanks.
You can absolutely go less volume... maybe 24-25L. Start at 25L and work your way further into the Advanced level. The 26.7L could be what’s hindering you from progressing into the Advanced level on a regular basis. I say keep your Phantom at 26.7L and go down at least 25.5L and see how that goes first. If it feels excellent then sell the 5’7” and grab a Groveler at 25L and you will be amazed at your quickness from rail to rail.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 thank you for the reply, yea, I was the guy who asked for the size differences for the black baron as that’s the next board I’m thinking of getting very soon.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 also what is a good groveller board that can help me progress?
@@taibirius1723 I'm the same weight as you? Did you happen to go down to 25L? how does it feel?
After five years of not surfing I got a 6’3 21” 2.75” 39 liters. I’m 6’5 225 and figured this would be good for me. In the past I had surfed skinnier 6’6s and plenty of 5’11-6’1 retro twin fins. I took it out and had a hard time catching anything. You think it’s my weight? Everytime I finally got into it by paddling with all my power I was already too far behind the face. Really frustrating. Not sure if I should just sell it and get something else
Your weight and skill level volume ranges.
Pro/Expert = 36-38L
Advanced = 38-40L
Intermediate = 41-43L
If you are out of surfing shape then I suggest 43-45L. Sell the board you got and try again. Or buy a new one and work your way down to that one.
Another awesome and very useful video from this channel. One question: Is it usefull to consider / Do you consider the eventual effect of the wetsuit weight?? For example, a difference of 5 pounds would change almost a liter using the formula. Tks!
I answered that question at the end of this episode...... Go up 1L for every 8-10 lb you gain or go down 1L for every 8-10 lb you loose. Adding rubber will add weight....
@@surfnshowreviews7777 Tks for the super super quick reply!! Always looking forward to see your videos!
This is super helpful! Thanks!
I always seen the charts saying I should go less L. But 27L on my style of Hawaii boards makes it bog because of rocker. I’m 165 and that means 27.5 divided by 6. Currently on a 27.6L Monsta box eps and it could be smaller so I just ride head high surf. But my big wave boards still get the under arm test haha
Big thanks for your videos 🤘🏾
Thanks Noel, great vid!
Hi Noel, another awesome video with so much insightful information. Using your formula for a intermediate surfer my volume is 28 litres. I’ve got a 5’6 (29.5L)HP Puddle Jumper which is great in 1-3ft beachies I surf. I’ve got a 5’10 (30L) Phantom which feels a little big since riding the Jumper unless it’s 4ft+. What board would you recommend for 2-4ft beachies? Cheers
For more performance in the pocket I like the NB2, Medina model, Modern Fish by Akila Aipa.
Thanks Noel
57 yo at 160 lbs, with an effed shoulder, but still want to shortboard. Local shaper suggested I go 6'6", at about 40 liters, for winter waves up here in norcal (it's been overhead to doh every day the past month). Haven't surfed a 6'6" since the Clark foam days, so kinda freaking out...but the shaper has 40 years exp.
Sounds a bit long to me too but Norcal winter waves are bigger and way more powerful compared to most Socal waves. How tall are you?
@@surfnshowreviews7777 was 6'1" years ago, but last time I measured 5'11"...maybe did it wrong. Yes, waves up here can have hawaii power, depending on the spot.
Spot on 🤙🏾
Very informative Video. Thank you very much.
What orange rail Aipa Model is this in the background?
Cheers,
Jan-Erik
The orange rail Akila Aipa board is a prototype.
I assume you get this a lot from punters like me, but I am 210lbs and bought a 6'0 stock Firewire Seaside (before watching your video). I don't know where I am on the skill spectrum since I don't know what defines beginner Vs intermediate, but I go out everyday if there is a wave, have zero trouble catching waves and getting up and ride along the face happily in either direction. Starting to get into cutbacks, bottom turns and proper pumping. If I assume I am in the beginner/intermediate zone, then I do (210/6)+(5 or 7). Which brings me to 40-42L. The 6'0 seaside is 44.8L. It does feel like a bit of a stretch under the arm in terms of thickness and width and gets slappy on faster waves (more on top of the water rather than sitting in). I am wondering if I should go with the 5'11 instead? It is 41.1L and felt much more comfortable holding it in the shop. Note also it is EPS. The only reason I didn't get it was because I was unsure about going that short (I am 6'5). Since it is a groveller board, should I just stick with the added volume of my 6'0 or would it be worth switching to the 5'11?
You could easily ride the 5’11”. The 5’11 will offer more sensitivity and your turns will be quicker and sharper. Either way if the 6’0” feels good then no reason to buy the 5’11”.
Excellent tip, thanks.
Hi Noel, great content as always. I weight 90kgs (198lbs) and usually ride 32-33L eps boards for daily drivers and grovelers. I am looking to buy a mini step up, maybe the twin pin ci but I am not sure how much Ls should I add for being a step up and a PU. Tended to go for a 6’3 but afraid 38L may be too much? I surf mainly point breaks when gets big. Cheers!
It really depends on how big the waves are and how hollow the wave is too. For me a mini step up is a couple inches longer from my 5’7” (27L)HPSB… so I go 5’9” and maybe add 1L to (28L) for bigger waves here in So Cal. If I’m in HI I might ride a 5’11” at 29L. Now for waves like Sunset and Ocean Beach it’s looks a lot different in board length and volume.
I say go up to 35-36L for your step up if the wave is not heavy
@@surfnshowreviews7777 excellent, thanks! I live in the surf coast in Australia, riding mostly at Bells when gets decent. Wave is not that heavy but some strong rips do require extra foam. Cheers, Noel!
I’m 222lb, 5’8 and 58 yo. Won a comp in doh+ surf once - longtime ago 😂
Recently bought a 6’1 Glazer at around 45L. It’s the perfect fit for an older, heavier guy - paddles in well but turns quickly in short arcs - previous boards 6’4 so the contrast is very noticeable. Seems like past a certain weight you need something substantial to keep you on top of the water... kinda like mosquitoes vs frogs 😂
Needed this vid badly Noel...im 155 LBs looking to go to 160+ soon lol, I'm 6ft, and I'm an int-adv quickly advancing as im surfing everyday almost all day. Pretty fit, workout and surf daily. I haven't had too many short boards ever and i cant seem to figure out my right dims.. I had a 6'1 driver 2.0 and the rails felt a tiny bit too thick and the board felt also just a tad bit too wide. (6,1,19.38, 2,45 are the dims). Im thinking about going with stock dims on the fever but is it worth to go a tiny bit down in custom dims and wait that 4-month timeframe?? Hopefully, you can let me know if you think i should go custom dims up or down from 6'0 stock or maybe i should just buy a 6'0 stock and it be fine! Sorry for the paragraph just need some guidance before i put in a order and wait too long or buy a stock board that doesn't fit right. Thanks for the review! ps I'm in an A-class ventura county surf spot as my home break for reference of what waves ill be riding.
The Fever is epic.... if the Stock 6’ hits your liter range then no need to go custom. I suggest getting into your local shop to feel up a stock 6’ Fever and see how the board feels under your arm.
I generally struggle with dimensions on boards. I am intermediate and fairly light for my weight. I love the control and manoeuvreability I get from boards at the bottom end of the litre range but then struggle with my wave count. I pump up the volume to the upper end and catch waves but struggle with the rails being too thick and takes me a while to get control over the board. I practice as much as I can for my location but is there anything you would suggest on length, width, thickness to overcome? Or just practice more 😊
Go more in the middle of you liter range. The low end might be to low and the high side of your liter range sounds to high. Find middle ground on volume and work it out.
Great video . Thanks for the insight. The k.i.s.s. theory. Works every time. Your a legend .
Another great Video Noel. Would be great to see part 2 - Dial in your Litres for step ups. I always struggle with a step up, Im in Australia, 99% of the time I'm surfing knee to shoulder height waves. Surfing boards mostly between 5'3" and 5'11" in the 28 - 30 ltr range. When it comes to getting a board made for Bali like a 6'6" the extra length obvs adds more volume. So I struggle with thickness...do I go the same thickness as say a 5'9" or do I go thinner due to the extra length and volume, or maybe the answer is simpler than that? cheers
I would add 0.5-1L to my Mini Step Up and maybe 2 Liters to a legitimate step up for 10’+ surf.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 what do you do with thickness?
@@marcusdavis2208 I will add length first then scale scale thickness accordingly. Good example... if my HPSB is 5’9” x 18 7/8 x 2 5/16 at 26L then my mini step up is 5’11” 18 1/2 x 2 5/16 27L. The thickness might change or not.... the volume will change by length. I would get on a website like CI and mess with custom dims on my step up to get my liters right.
Ah perfect, exactly what I was looking for
Noel, great video. It would have saved me some money (hahaha). Question, would you add anything for age (52) or just stay with ability?
Some of my older friends like to add 1-2L extra for age and I think that’s great. It’s really a preference of feel underfoot and what you want to achieve in your surfing. If catching waves at a competitive surf spot is most important to you then by all means add some foam. For me.... I like my boards more responsive so I will work harder paddling for quicker reaction time on my boards. Even though I’m 48 years old.
Thanks for your response. I did liters up when I was getting back into surfing after an injury. But now that I’m back in shape I don’t think I need the extra foam. I can feel it when coming off the bottom or addressing the lip, etc. Btw I’m 186lbs , 5’11” advanced. Was riding boards around 34L after the injury. After watching your video I realized I need 32 to 32.5.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 You look and surf great for 48 years old.. I had the same question as I'm 52 years of age so thanks for that. Also... Would you add 1-2 liters if you only get out every 3 months or so.. I live 7 hours from the coast and pretty much have to plan mini vacations to be able to surf. I have myself at 42.33 liters using your calculations at beg/int (former intermediate because it's been many years) and that's including an extra 2 liters added to account for the all the neoprene needed on the Oregon Coast. My current board is an old 6'9" Canyon that is probably around 38.5 liters. I'm just not sure how much to add.. Make it 42 or make it 45? Curious as to your thoughts.
@@caseymccormack2000 Get a Hypto Krypto by Haydenshapes and go up to 43L so you catch a bunch of waves and have fun.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 Thanks Noel.. I was looing at the Hypto in a 6'6" or 6'4"... Looks like a fun versatile shape. I would rather go as short as possible so I appreciate the advice. It was either that or a Firewire Evo. Are you still planning on reviewing the Hypto?
The community appreciates you man. Been getting on a SmoothStar trying to get the legs under me using some of your training videos.
How many pounds does a 5/4 wetsuit put on you? That's what I wear from December till April here in NY...I would say I'm an experienced intermediate who rides a shortboards anywhere between 32-35 liters...wondering if I should boost a few liters in the winter to get more speed (I'm 6'1 ~182 pounds with no suit on). Awesome review btw
I would say a 5/4 would add roughly 10-12 lbs. A good liter range for someone your weight surfing in trunks looks like this.
Pro/Expert level = 29.5-31.5L
Advanced = 32.5-33.5
Intermediate = 34.5-36.5L
Wearing your 5/4 adds roughly 1-1.5L the point of having a liter range is your high end should cover the extra weight of your winter suit.
Some guys add 2L for winter rubber like your wearing.... it’s really all preference. I hope this helps and makes sense.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 Wow thank you so much very helpful, definitely need to be on more volume in the winter
Hey Noel as usual a great video and spot on for me thank you so much!!!...my question is about litres for my step up - I surf a driver 2.0 6'1" at 30.3 litres I'm 176 pounds advanced surfer so my ideal litres by your formula is exactly that board, and I love the board although lately Ive been feeling that given the proformance 5oz s cloth construction which makes the board so light, I could go to the 6'0' at 29l...anyway, back to my question, how do I litre size my step up? Should I have the same litres as my normal shortboard, or add 10% roughly or what? I surf the driver 2.0 up to OH like 5 foot, when its 6 foot DOH I have to nurse the bottom turn a bit which is definitely holding me back....And further to this, would you recommend a pyzel ghost (I would get custom as I want at least 6'3" and dont like wide boards) over a lost step driver at similar dims and litres? I should add I would mostly surf the step up on not so hollow more slabby powerful wave like bells
Mini Step Up I say go up 1L. I want the extra foam to get into the wave early but I still want my turns to be sharp.
Dude your awesome, thanks for the great advise.
very reliable videos Noel ! Now, for you, if you had a 6"4""to tackle big waves , how many liters would that surfboard have ?
6’4” for me is pretty long... this would be a HI board length for me. Maybe 27-27.5L
Yea Noel! Great video!
I primarily surf BSR (Waco Surf). Should I add volume for wave pools? If so, how much? The fresh water in wave pools is not as buoyant as salt water.
I suggest EPS/Epoxy for the pools and you can actually go 1L less compared to what you ride in the ocean.
More liters you have you’re sacrificing top to bottom speed and turns?
@@Soulriderpowder Yes… as you get better at surfing you want your boards to be more responsive.
Hi Noel. Hope you have a great 2021 and thanksfor the tip. Matching the range with the outline and bottom contour of the board is what is not entirely clear to me. If you have less rocker and this equals better paddling, why adding a littler? Why not adding littlers for High performance PU?
Noel thanks so much for this video as well as all of your other content! I was hoping to clarify how you define Advanced or Intermediate- Ive been surfing 10+ years, do snaps (not 100% 12 o'clock vert)/cutbacks/floaters but no fins out and no airs, how many liters onto the base calculation should I add?
What’s your height and weight? What volume do you currently like on your daily driver?
@@surfnshowreviews7777171 lb/6'2, daily driver is a JS BB3 hyfi in 5'11 which is 32.1 liters. Time for a replacement and thinking Dom2 - figure that the 5'9 is probably best? Should that paddle similar enough to the BB3 (even tho 0.6l less)? Thanks!
@@powduh123 it will paddle similar
@@surfnshowreviews7777many thanks! 31-33 liters would you say is a reasonable range for my weight and ability?
That means @ 174 pounds I can aim for 29 litres....
that means the Christenson fish stock 5’4 is the correct sizing for me.
This video was right on time for me as my board was just delivered today.. thank you!
Hi Noel! I want to buy the Dominator 2. So do I get it right? I´m about 181 LB. Divided by 6 plus 3 (Intermediate) it would be about 33l. So the 5´10 would be a good choice? I´m riding the Dominator 2 already in 5´4 on a standing wave. But I´m not sure about the volume for the ocean.
Here are the liter ranges for you.
Pro/Expert = 29-31L
Advanced = 31-33L
Intermediate = 34-36L
Thanks for info. Needed this.
Thanks for the video Noel, good stuff. Where can I get one of those surfboard stands? The one your Orange railed board is on. Really cool. Thanks!
You can get the Rack here boardraxx.com/
Awesome. Thank you!
Hey Noel! I appreciate all of the work here and education being passed along. Had a quick question regarding this topic. I am 6’2 and weigh about 220. Goal is to get back to a solid 210 and the work has begun there. I’m probably on the low end intermediate level and have been looking at getting a higher performance daily driver for places like Blacks/Ocean Beach/Imperial Beach. What would you recommend for liters and board? I’ve been looking at the Phantom and Pyzalien 2 as well as the Happy from CI. Just kinda lost. Thanks for any help you can provide! Please keep doing what you’re doing.
I’m thinking 43-45 liters and I suggest the Hypto Krypto or CI Weirdo Ripper. The Hypto Krypto will paddle better and still have good hold in bigger waves like Blacks. The Weirdo Ripper needs a wave to go good but it’s packed with foam and it will go good at your breaks.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 you do get right back to your folks! Thank you. I actually have an Ultra Joe at about 45.5L. I think I’m going to just stick with that and get better there. I’ve been favoring the CI Mid at 7’6, but it’s time to dial in the Joe. Thank you!
Noel does too much volume ever hinder catching waves? Could it potentially make the wave roll under you, or is it really just a matter of sacrificed performance?
I think it’s more of a sacrifice in performance. More volume will get you into more waves.
Noel Rules ! Regards From Brazil
When will we see a "Salas Designs" boards? With all that knowledge and experience trying all sorts of shapes/brands, I think you could design some great boards. 💯🏄♂️🤘
Cheers... I’m working on a board design with Akila Aipa.
Hey Noel! Do you take into account the weight of the wetsuit for the Weight/6 formula? or we should add it, if you always surf in a 4/3 or 5/4mm wetsuit. thanks
I would add 1L -1.5L more to your liter range using this formula for 5/4mm suits with boots and gloves.
Hi Noel thank you for all your teaching . Where is the link for pay ?
You can sign up here…
www.patreon.com/surfnshow
I trust Noel Salas more than anyone in the water but Idk I think a lot depends on your ability to paddle and take off deep. I'm roughly 200lbs and anymore than 30L and things feel corky. I see so many folks 185lbs saying they are on 35L boards and I'm thinking you need to paddle harder. I guess volume in the nose and the rocker play a good part in this decision.
Hey Noel,
I hope you can help me ! I’m 6 foot tall and 160 pounds. I want to buy the seaside for spring to autumn waves in the south west of France ! I just don’t really know which dimensions I should get... I’m an intermediate/advanced surfer and hesitating between the 5.4 and the 5.5.
Hope you can help me !
Keep doing what you’re doing !
You’re the best ;)
I say 5’4”... it will float like 30.3L. I like thought of the 5’5” due to you being so tall but it’s a bit to much foam.... it will float like 32L.
Guess I figured my exact liters by chance then. Thanks Noel
Gonna try this awesome man 💪
Hi Noel and thank you for your clips!
Just to make sure I understand what you’re saying correctly, this mean that as a 162lbs beginner my volume range should roughly be between 32L and 34L. That seems a bit low doesn’t it?
Now that I have my liter range, how should I decide the length? I'm 5'6.5, 160lb.
I'm looking at 5 different boards ranging from 5'6 to 5'10 with 30l each (daily driver and grovelers) Any ideas!?! thanks appreciate it!
@@finao8231 The length can depend on the board category and your skill level too. What is your skill level? What are the waves like at your home break? What are the board Dimensions and volume of your favorite board right now for your home break?
@@surfnshowreviews7777 I'm an intermediate riding mushy 2-3ft waves but determined to progress into good overhead hallow 4-6 North Shore, Oahu. Got my eyes on pyzel 5'7 gremlin, 5'6 white tiger, 5'10 phantom, 5'9 pyzelien 2 and 5'9 mini ghost. I kinda want the one with the best paddle power, fast and can rip on waves waist high to overhead. Narrowest 19 3/8 widest 19 7/8 and all around same thickness 2.5
@@finao8231 I say Phantom… excellent paddler, easiest to shred and will rip 3-7’ surf.
@@surfnshowreviews7777 Phantom it is. Thank you 🤙🏾
I learning this the more I surf shorter boards, I bought 5.5 hydra 33L lib tech iam 5.8 170 never thought I would be surfing a 5.5.
does it float you and paddle well? im 5'9 145 and looking at a 5'5 libtech hydra
@@stdavis22 yes it paddles well, and its thick around the rails
@surfnshow this is so valuable. What about us taller blokes? I’m 190 but 6’4”, does that impact my liter range?
Not really… however it does affect your rail line. You taller guys need more length but volume range is still solid with these calculations
@@surfnshowreviews7777 So stick with the same volume stretched out as much as possible, thank you!
Hey Noel, I'm an intermediate surfer 6'-0", ~190lbs mostly surfing the south shore of Oahu usually about 4-6' hawaiian size.. I'm coming off an 8'-0" funboard and looking to transition to a smaller daily driver board that I can learn more turns and technical surfing on. Can you recommend any boards, sizes, volumes to look for? I've been looking at the Machado fish and Pyzalien 2.
The transition can be difficult as the shorter boards will feel very responsive and a bit unstable. I think a good place to start your way down in size and volume is roughly 38-40L. I think as you get comfortable on the shorter board you can scale the volume down a bit more and end up on 35-37L. I suggest the Pyzalien 2 fin f the waves are hollow 4-6’ HI style.... if your surfing waves that have size but aren’t heavy then I suggest the Seaside. The Seaside paddles better, it’s faster, and it will be more stable due to it being wider.