I'd heard and seen photos of Rush Randle sailing a windsurfer with a hydrofoil coming out of the finbox...I think that was about nine or ten years ago, but then I was checking out the video below, and five minutes in (after watching guys and gals planing into duckjibes on longboards back in the 80's) I see a guy sailing this creation.
People did all kinds of things on longboards back in the day.
There's a new (new to the Puffin, anyway) website dedicated to longboards that's worth checking out. Longboards themselves are worth checking out, if you haven't sailed one recently. If you see me with my ancient Superlight come over and ask if you can take it for a spin. The moment you start gliding you're going to want one!
Here's the video. The hydrofoil stuff is about 4 minutes in. Also don't miss the funboard song shortly afterwards! I believe it's in German (the rest of the video is)...would love a translation of that song.
The video was posted in Youtube as being from 1981...I don't know how accurate that is. The rigs certainly are from that era.
We thank Pierre for calling our attention to both the video and the website. Pierre is the mad freestyler who's still spinning mad moves on ancient gear today.
Whoa - talk about a flashback...
The song's all about how cool you are if you're riding funboards. One of the lines translates to something like 'If you can ride a board like this, you're out front in the scene' - early 80's was the leading edge of Neue Deutsche Welle (New German Wave - bad 80's pop music with German lyrics, as opposed to bad 80's pop music with English lyrics - had to be there to know the true pain a cultural fad can produce...)
Some of the commentary is just priceless - whether it be instructional verbiage on jibes or chop hopping, or talk about the art and science of fins and their outline, foils, materials, and flex (some things don't change...) It's funny to watch the footage and then hear the commentary expound on how tiny moves of toe pressure etc. are all it takes to steer these high-performance rigs with the utmost precision - all the while watching guys wrench their equipment around. The sport sure has come a long way...
Thanks for the memories!
-Andreas
Posted by: g-42 | October 11, 2007 at 03:09 PM
Thanks for the detail on the song and commentary! Tiny toe pressure, huh? Whatever it takes to control my funboard.
Posted by: Michael | October 11, 2007 at 09:29 PM
Yep - hydrofoils were real .. I tried (emphasized) one once (again - emphasized) .. attached to a stock windsurfer (circa '85)!
That one attached through the daggerboard (it was not called 'centerboard' yet) slot.
I remember when you started moving you felt all the drag from the apparatus underwater and then as soon as you reached 'takeoff velocity' the thing POPPED out of the water!
Like the guy in the pic at top, all of a sudden you're standing another +1 foot above the water .. weird.
The thing that made it really difficult to use was once you were up neither the board nor sail reacted 'as expected' anymore - it was really difficult to control the direction of the board .. and that's not just upwind/downwind...
You now had 2 additional 'moment axes' to control: 'pitch' = the bow of the board diving up-and-down, and 'yaw' = the tendency of thing to roll about its longitudinal (length-wise) axis!!!
Very strange, but kinda fun, experience .. another part of the sport's history....
-- Chuck
Posted by: Chuck | October 14, 2007 at 10:20 AM
I especially enjoyed the catalog of catapults at the end of the film. The music seals the deal.
Posted by: John | October 15, 2007 at 11:46 PM
Hi, I'm Mrs. "Windsurfwoody", born and raised in Germany and got a real kick out of the video. I've been in Italy, Lago di Garda several times in the 80's.
I wasn't windsurfing back then, but it's on the to do list to go back and catch some waves. Beautiful place!
Woodette
Posted by: Margot Woodworth | November 03, 2007 at 12:29 PM
Thanks for the comment, Mrs Windsurfwoody, and welcome to the Peconic Puffin. (Mrs Windsurfwoody is "Woodette" in Windsurf Woody's excellent blog. The Windsurfwoodys live up to their name...check out Mr. Windsurfwoody and his woody board in this Peconic Puffin post.
Posted by: Michael | November 03, 2007 at 06:39 PM
Hi - the hydrofoil longboard caught my eye while surfing around for longboard information. Back around this same time, 1980-1981, there was a Greek engineer/hydrodynamicist living in my village on Long Island. He designed and built a complex hydrofoil to fit into the daggerboard slot of his original Windsurfer. As I recall, it was a T-foil arrangement, with multiple foils along the span (sort-of a bi-wing if you will). He would take this out on Port Jefferson Harbor when the wind was strong enough for him to get up on the foil (he needed some good wind with the stock Windsurfer sail he was using). It was quite a spectical to see him holding on to that old wishbone boom, with no harness, but moving quite fast. Seeing him on this thing got me pretty excited to go windsurfing. I wish I had taken a picture.
Posted by: Jesse Falsone | June 10, 2008 at 10:03 AM
That's a great story, Jesse! If you learn anything else about the guy (or find a photo) I would love to use it in the blog.
Posted by: Michael | June 10, 2008 at 12:11 PM
I saw a listing on eBay for this board I was describing, or one identical to it. I downloaded the pictures, but here is the URL. No bids!
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&rd=1&item=140251698817&ssPageName=STRK:MEWA:IT&ih=004
Posted by: Jesse Falsone | August 19, 2008 at 03:09 PM