Lost Surfboards 2015

 

Lost
Web: www.lostsurfboards.net • Enquiries: www.danielsurf.com
Email: [email protected] • Tel: 01752 330772

Bean Bag

5’5” x 21.75” x 2.56”

(36.15 litres)

Shaper: Matt ‘Mayhem’ Biolos

Fins: 5 fin

A radically extreme small wave concept! Based around maximum surface area for lift and stability in tiny surf. Balanced by a “double ender” outline and a tip to tail vee bottom, for forgiveness and on rail surfing in the smallest of waves. Similar to the Couch Potato, but with a wider tail and a lower overall rocker. It also features a flat (low center of gravity) and stable deck. This board is meant to be surfed very short. Unlike most extremely wide and short boards, it has the ability to be surfed aggressively from the tail, and up onto a rail, without sliding out…Get off the couch, toss your LazyBoy and bust out the BeanBag!

Puddle Jumper

5’8” x 21.50” x 2.63”

(36.8 litres)

Shaper:Matt ‘Mayhem’ Biolos

Fins: 5 fin

The Puddle Jumper is a concaved, planing speeder. Domestic bliss with a twist. Based off the outline of the Bottom Feeder, but with reversed bottom and rocker curves. This board features a concave bottom that transitions to vee in the tail. The wide outline makes for easy wave catching and down the line glide and stability. The concave bottom adds lift and increased rail curve, which allows radical top to bottom surfing. The straight rail line and vee in the tail keep the board moving forward and hold in during hard carving maneuvers. “This is the most excited I have ever been about a small wave surfboard. Personally, it’s the best small wave board I have ever ridden. I have never made a claim like that about any board before,” Matt Biolos.

Short Round

5’10” x 20.25” x 2.44”

(32.35 litres)

Shaper: Matt ‘Mayhem’ Biolos

Fins: Thruster

Our latest high performance hybrid. In the tradition of the Rocket and its many knock offs, the Shortround bridges the gap between easy riding “cheater” boards and the HP Shortboard. Tested all around Southern California, this board has more than impressed. The buzz about it is spreading fast. The speed comes from a low entry rocker and wide-ish nose, with a forward wide point and generous concave throughout. The performance comes from a moderate, but not flipped up, tail rocker, a double concave through the fins and the same sort of modern bump squash tail that you would find on a typical contest style, small wave HP shortboard. All combined, it doesn’t look like anything fancy and there are no gimmicks, but some times less is more, and there is a lot packed into this little board.