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I recently acquired a 5’5″ JS Hyfi Pyscho Nitro at 2½ inches thick and 29.3 litres of volume. I would think twice about getting a super short, thick board in Hyfi. I’ve never felt the strange warbly feedback on bigger choppy waves that a normal epoxy produces. The sandwich and fibre weave seems to dull down the chop and they still handle bigger conditions. But cost withstanding and despite arriving late into the epoxy game, JS has nailed the construction. They can add in a fourth, at $1199 it’s also expensive. And that’s what I look for in a board, as do a lot of surfers. Having surfed a lot of Hyfis over several years I would have to agree with JS’s three claims of faster, lighter, stronger. It was lighter, felt so sparky under foot – seems like it was spring loaded compared to the PU. I had a 5’9″ PU Monsta Box, which was a great board, when it came out in Hyfi (5’9″ again) I grabbed that and it was next level, way better than the PU version. That way it won’t feel too “corky”, or feel like you can’t sink it into turns. That’s why you may notice that the same dimension board will have more litres of volume in PU than it will in the Hyfi epoxy version. They’re slightly more buoyant and because of this JS head shaper, Jason Stevenson, trims a bit of extra bulk out. Hyfis have definitely got a good spark to them. Having done a lot of testing now I’d have to agree with JS’s claim on this one. I’ve even had several wash up on the rocks after snapping a leash and had minimal damage. Over the years I’ve subjected them to many heavy situations in Raglan where I’ve been sure I’d emerge to see them in two pieces, but not even a scratch. Seven Hyfis in and I’ve creased just one – and that was mostly user error – I rode it into dry sand. I talked with a major board distributor recently who told me they see far more stringer-less epoxy boards buckle than PU boards … including JS Hyfi’s. For me I’d rather have an amazing board that might not last over a pig that I’ll have forever. I’m picking that it’s because those who go for JS’s typically want a good time over a long time. That could be because JS’s PU boards have a terrible reputation for snapping and buckling. JS’s website claims that their epoxy boards last longer than PU boards. The lightness makes them so easy to throw around and that really pays dividends for more advanced surfers. I pick up a PU board now and it feels remarkably heavy. I’ve had seven Hyfis now and I’d have to say this sounds about right to me. JS claims that its Hyfi boards are 20 percent lighter than the comparable PU version and if you get a Hyfi it’s pretty much the same weight that Parko, Jules, Dusty, etc get with their boards. The claim is that this construction is faster, stronger and lighter. It also has a diamond-shaped fibre weave on the bottom and over the rails. The carbon strips were initially just on the bottom, but now feature on the top where they are used to strengthen and control the board’s flex. Hyfi, or hybrid fiber, as JS calls it is essentially a stringer-less epoxy core with a few fancy layers sandwiched together and carbon strips. Photo: Derek MorrisonĪnd so the Hyfi was born. Photo: Derek MorrisonĬarbon strip detail. Their excuse was that they wanted to get it right before taking it to the market.Ĭarbon strips along the bottom add strength and control flex. JS were relatively late to the epoxy party with most of the other big international board brands having an offering a year or two before them. Friends had been talking up the JS Industries boards, but I wasn’t keen to go there until I could order an epoxy. Regardless I stuck with epoxy boards for 1-4ft clean waves. But as soon as there was any chop, or if the waves got solid there would be this strange warble through the board – it would flex all over and feel all kinds of wrong. I had more paddle, more spring underfoot and felt five years younger going into a bottom turn. Still epoxy-curious, I ordered an early Channel Islands wooden-stringer epoxy and I was hooked. Not impressed with either performance or longevity I was back onto trusty PU boards.
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The surf-shop sales grom turned an epoxy board upside down and jumped up and down on it to demonstrate the flex and how strong it was – I promptly ordered a custom which I waited three months for and then broke it within three weeks. Photo: Derek MorrisonĪbout 10 years ago I made my first foray into the world of epoxy surfboards. Carbon strips along the bottom add strength and control flex. Like a good comb over, I’ve been trialing different surfboard constructions in an attempt to keep my surfing in the more vertical range rather than horizontal. As a 40-something year old grommet with 30 years of surfing under the belt, I’ve got an insatiable hunger to surf as well as I can before the inevitable decline of aging sets in for good.
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