glossary

SWAYLOCK’S GLOSSARY

ACETONE

Commonly used chemical solvent used to wipe clean tools and equipment of polyester resin. Also known as Di-methylketone. Used for cleaning composite surfaces prior to bonding and also metal surfaces prior to other treatments. Can also be used to remove uncured epoxy resin from tools and other items. Classed as “Seriously Flammable” with a flashpoint of –4 F (-20 C). Has a high evaporation rate.

ASPECT RATIO

Ratio of base to height or length to width. A high aspect ratio fin is long and narrow.

BALSA

A lightweight wood from the balsa tree “Ochroma Lagopus”, used to make surfboards. Varies in density from (typically) 6-18 lbs per cubic foot. The word balsa itself is Spanish meaning raft, in reference to its excellent floatation qualities. In Ecquador, where much balsa is harvested, it is known as Boya, meaning buoy.

BASTING

Laying down additional laminating resin on laps, rails, tail, or low spots before a hot coat to ensure that all weave is covered.

BELLY

Belly is a term used to describe a rounded surfboard bottom, when viewed from the front or rear (not from the side).

BLANK

Foam surfboard core prior to shaping. May be ordered in any number of shapes, thicknesses, densities, with preset or custom rockers.

CABOSIL (Aerosil)

Fumed Silica, used for altering the properties of resin to add viscosity or increase bond strength. Use in combination with other fillers to improve working properties and minimize draining with polyester and epoxy resins. Cabosil/Aerosil (2 brand names) can make sanding more difficult. See Milled Fiber (used to add strength), microballoons (easier sanding, light), Q-Cell

CAD/CAM

Computer-aided design/computer-aided manufacturing.

CARBON FIBER

Polymer fibers produced by the pyrolysis (incineration that chemically decomposes organic materials by heat in the absence of oxygen) of organic precursor fibers such as rayon, the polymer polyacrylonitrile, and pitch in an inert atmosphere. The term is often used interchangeably with “graphite”; however, carbon fibers and graphite fibers differ in the temperature at which the fibers are made and heat-treated, and the amount of carbon produced.

CATALYST

A substance that changes the rate of a chemical reaction without itself undergoing permanent change in composition or becoming a part of the molecular structure of the product. A catalyst markedly speeds up the cure of a compound when added in minor quantity as compared to the amounts of primary reactants. See, MEKP

CANT

Cant is the angle a fin makes relative to the bottom of the board. When a board is upside down with the fins pointing up, if the fins point straight up (90 degrees) they have no cant. Canted fins point slightly outward, so the tip of the fin is farther away from the stringer (toward the rail) than the base of the fin.

CHANNELS

Channels are grooves or concave shapes in the bottom of a surfboard, running from front to back, although typically not for the whole length of the surfboard.

CHEATER COAT

1) Resin applied to wood before laminating as a pre-treatment, to prevent dry spots in the lamination caused by wood soaking up the resin.

2) Basting of laps or low spots with laminating resin before hot coating is sometimes called a cheater coat

CHINE

A chine is a (typically) hard-edged angle sometimes used on the bottom of a rail, often at the nose of a long board. Chines can be deep or shallow, wide or narrow, blended or sharp. Boat hulls often have chines.

CHROME FINISH

see Volan, Finish

CLOTH

A fine weave of woven fiberglass.

CONCAVE

A concave is an area on the bottom of a surfboard that not flat but curved from rail to rail, thus making the bottom of the board higher off the water in the center than at the rails. Concaves are often used under the nose of the board (single concave) or in pairs between side fins (double concave) and are intended to provide lift or facilitate water flow by altering rocker.

CURE

The polymerization or the transforming from the liquid to the solid state with maximum physical properties, including hardness.

DECK

The deck is the top of the surfboard (where the feet and the wax go!) Decks can be flat, or domed. A surfboard with a domed deck is thickest in the center (along the stringer) and thinner along the rails, so that the top surface of the surfboard is curved if viewed from the front or rear of the board.

DELAMINATION

Separation of the layers of material in a laminate, either local or covering a wide area. Can occur in the cure or subsequent life. Physical separation or loss of bond between laminate plies.

DING

Damaged area on a surfboard; fractured glass, crushed foam, etc.

DRY SPOT

In laminated glass, an area over which the resin and the glass have not bonded.

E GLASS

Fiberglass fabric, the standard in the industry for most surfboard construction. E Glass is a family of glasses with a borosilicate composition; also known as “Electrical glass” as it is suitable for electrical laminates because of its high resistivity. See S Glass, Warp Glass

EPOXY RESIN

Resins that may be of widely different structures but are characterized by the presence of the epoxy group. A polymerizable thermoset polymer containing one or more epoxide groups. The aromatic type epoxy resins are normally used in composites.

FALSA

Fake Balsa. Artwork that mimics the look of balsa wood.

FIBERGLASS

A cloth woven from glass strands gathered into yarns, available in various weights and finishes. Fibers similar to wool or cotton fibers, but made from glass; sometimes called fibrous glass. Glass fiber forms used in surfboard making include cloth, milled fibers, roving. See, E Glass, S Glass, Warp Glass, Volan, Roving, Milled Fiber

FILAMENTS

Individual glass fibers of indefinite length, usually as pulled from a stream of molten glass flowing through an orifice of the bushing. A number are gathered together to make a strand or end of roving or yarn.

FILLER

A relatively inert material added to reduce cost, to modify mechanical properties, to serve as a base for color effects, or to improve the surface texture.

FINISH

Material applied to fibers, after sizing is removed, to improve matrix-to-fiber coupling. Typical finishes used for surfboard fiberglass fabrics include Silane and Volan.

FISH EYE

A circular separation, typically in a gloss coat generally caused by contamination such as oil, dust, water, or stearated sandpaper. The term “fish eye” is also sometimes applied to dimples in gloss coats caused by failure of wax to rise to the surface.

FLEX-FIN

A fin designed to bend, usually at the tip, to enhance performance.

FOAM

A lightweight, cellular plastic material containing gas-filled voids. Surfboard foams used by surfboard makers include polyurethane (most common), expanded polystyrene (EPS, aka “Hydrofoam”), extruded polystyrene (XPS, XTR), and Styrofoam (which is a brand name polystyrene).

FOIL

Foil is the change in thickness of a board from the nose to the tail, or of a fin from the leading edge to the trailing edge. See S-deck.

FUMED SILICA (trade names Aerosil , Cabosil)

A very low weight thickening agent used in polyesters or epoxies.

GEL TIME

Time from the introduction of a catalyst until gel formation, i.e. the stage at which a liquid begins to exhibit pseudoelastic properties.

GLASS/RESIN RATIO

The amount of glass by weight compared to the amount of resin by weight in a finished laminate.

GLOSS RESIN

Resin formulated to provide a hard durable glossy finish coat for surfboards. Can be wet sanded and polished to a brilliant finish. Contains wax, dries tack free.

GUN

A gun is a surfboard specifically made for very large surf. Guns tend to be long, narrow, highly rockered boards with features designed to handle high speed and choppy water conditions.

HIP

Increase or break in template curve, similar to kick. Usually within 2 feet of tail.

HUMIDITY

Moisture content of the air.

JIG

A fixture for holding parts in position, while joining them together or to maintain their shape.

K GLASS

Fabric of non twisted yarn, flat weave and direct sizing, improved physical properties and excellent clarity. K Glass is somewhat more challenging to laminate.

KICK

Increase or break in rocker curve; usually within 2 feet of nose or 1 foot of tail.

LAMINATE

1) (verb) The act of processing resin and reinforcement into a bonded structure, as when one or two layers of fiberglass cloth are laminated onto a surfboard blank,

2) (noun): A product made by bonding together two or more layers (plies) of material.

3) a symbol, logo, decal or artwork [aka “lam art”] that is typically printed on rice paper and laminated onto the surfboard under or between the fiberglass cloth layers.

LAMINATING RESIN

Resin that has no wax added and is used to attach (laminate) fiberglass cloth to foam, wood or other fiberglass.

LAP

A lap is an area of overlapping fiberglass cloth, typically along the rails, nose and tail of a surfboard. When the overlapping cloth is left alone it is called a free lap. When the overlapping cloth is trimmed or cut so that it looks neater it is called a cut lap. Laps may be sanded down or ground down before final glassing. A lap line may be caused by a knife cut into the blank.

MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET (ABBREVIATED MSDS)

Safety information required by federal regulation; applicable to e.g. fiberglass fabrics, resins, solvents. The MSDS provides important information regarding health hazards, flammability, special protection required, first aid procedures, etc.

METHYL ETHYL KETONE PEROXIDE (ABBREVIATED MEKP)

Methyl Ethyl Ketone Peroxide, a catalyst used to cause polyester resins to harden. Highly corrosive; a strong oxidizing agent (free radical source). Available in regular or slow reaction (MEKP/SR)

MICROSPHERES / MICROBALLONS

Microscopic bubbles of glass, ceramic or Phenolic, used as fillers in epoxy and polyester compounds to reduce density.

MID-POINT

Halfway between the nose and tail of a surfboard. Often the wide point is described as being so many inches in front of, or behind the mid-point.

MILLED GLASS FIBER

Continuous glass strands hammer milled into very short glass fibers. Fine powdered glass fiber used as reinforcement to increase mechanical strengths of resins. Often used with microspheres. Milled fiber is used to add strength, e.g. when putting leash plugs or fin plugs in a surfboard. Can make sanding difficult.

MONOMER

A simple molecule that is capable of reacting with like or unlike molecules to form a polymer. E.g., Styrene.

NATURAL ROCKER

Rocker inherent in any given blank, i.e. the rocker that is molded into the blank, as intended by the designer. Natural rocker can be customized when stringers are glued in by bending, e.g. the nose a specified amount higher (+N) or lower (-N), or by adjusting the tail similarly (+T, -T).

NOSE WIDTH

The width of the nose (front) end of a surfboard, always measured 12” back from the tip of the nose.

ORANGE PEEL

A surface that takes on the rough wavy texture of an orange peel.

PATCH

An extra layer of fiberglass cloth added to a portion of the deck of a board, either under the knees (knee patch) or under the back foot (tail patch) – used to add strength and reduce dents.

PIGMENT

A color additive put in resin to produce a solid or opaque color. Pigments contain solids, and can be used to make a resin opaque. The higher the proportion of pigment, the more opaque the resin. The only pure pigment is white. See Tint

PINLINE

Lines made using heavily pigmented resin, or painted on, used for decorative purposes or to cover areas such as lap lines.

POLYMER

A large molecule created by a large number of smaller molecules, called monomers, in a regular pattern. The word polymer comes from Greek roots: poly means “many” and mer comes from “merous” which roughly means “parts”.

Q-CELL

“Silcell” also known as “Q-Cell” is a filler added to resin typically when doing ding repair, used to thicken. Tends to be slightly gray in color. See Cabosil, microballoons, milled fiber.

RAKE

On a fin, rake is the angle off of vertical of the leading edge of the fin. A highly raked fin tends to stall or spin out sooner, other things being equal.

RAILS

Rails are the edge of a surfboard. Soft rails are relatively round and without defined edges. Hard rails have a corner and a distinct edge. The shape of the rails affects how water flows over the rails.

RELIEF CUT

Cuts (typically “V” shaped notches) put into fiberglass fabric before laminating. The purpose of a relief cut is to allow fabric to go around rails and corners without “bunching up.”

RESIN

In reinforced plastics, the material used to bind together the reinforcement material; the matrix. Most resins are polymers.

RESPIRATOR

Face mask used to avoid inhaling particles and vapors. 3M makes good ones that use organic vapor cartridges for glassing and particulate filters for sanding. Make sure it fits!

RICE PAPER

Paper used for laminating artwork into surfboards. Nearly invisible when laminated.

ROCKER

Rocker is the bottom curve of a surfboard from front to rear. Entry or nose rocker is the part of the curve under the front of the board; tail rocker is the curve under the back of the board. The rocker is typically measured along the stringer; rocker measured at the rails can be different due to vee, belly or other bottom contouring.

ROVING

A collection of bundles of continuous filaments collected into a parallel bundle either as untwisted strands or as twisted yarns. Used, e.g., to install glassed-on fins.

S DECK

An S-deck is a hump or dome in the middle to rear area of the deck, as opposed to an even curved deck which is flat across. S-decks are usually domed both ways lengthwise and laterally. Using an S deck is a way of adding volume.

S GLASS

A family of magnesium-alumina-silicate glasses with a certified chemical composition which conforms to an applicable material specification and which produces high mechanical strength. Compared to E-glass, S laminates show improved tensile strength, flexural strength, flexural modulus and compressive strength, impact resistance and toughness. S glass laminates are about 10% to 30% stronger than E-glass laminates, for the same weight.

SHAPER

Sub-species of surf culture,superior sense of feel and curve continum in three dimensions to high aquitty… refinement of surfboard forms a driving force in survival mechanisms.Incapable of averting glances when surf forms pass in field of vision …can Identify board styles and types at a distance and discern abnormalities of foil and plan with ease…cape a bull of invisibility and only possible to observe outside enclosed close quartered dusty habitat…Unlike “surfus derilictus”,“seeme surf tooous”, and “surfus ucan paymiensi” ,is quite busy in quiet and deeply involved in contemplative disciplines concerning obscure flow dynamic theorum and hypothisis.Tool aquisition is a priority.Few of the individual sub spicies at a time are revealed for mass inspection and consumption and slowly become absorbed into other disciplines such as : marketing ,billing,promotion of trite hack kneed designs and protracted term paperesque explanations of plagerized freeform intuitional forms used for transgressing the boundry waters between shoreline and sea. Survival into the 21st century is threatened by Technology in the form of Robotic encursions into surfboard production and real estate development need for salesmen…ambrose…short form : a guy who shapes surf boards

SHELF LIFE

The length of time a material can be stored and continue to meet specification requirements, remaining suitable for its intended use.

SIZING

A compound that binds together and stiffens yarn, providing resistance to abrasion during weaving; normally removed and replaced with finish (e.g. Volan, Silane) before use.

SOLAREZ

Polyester laminating resin: a mixture of polyester resin with a solar-activated catalyst. With ultraviolet or UV cure, Solarez will remain liquid until exposed to direct sunlight and hardens in 3 minutes once exposed to sunlight. Can also be catalyzed using MEKP. See, Ultraviolet.

SOLVENT

A liquid used to dissolve and clean materials.

SPOON

A concave area cut into the deck. On longboards it is usually in the front third of the board to reduce weight. In kneeboards, the entire deck may be concave. In extreme cases the entire deck is eliminated so the kneeboard can flex to enhance performance.

STRESS CRACK

External or internal cracks caused by tensile stresses; cracking can be present internally, externally or in combination.

STRINGER

A stringer is one or more strips of strengthening material, typically wood, glued vertically into the foam of a surfboard blank, typically basswood, spruce, balsa, red cedar. See T-Band

STYRENE (MONOMER)

An unsaturated hydrocarbon used as a co-reactant diluent (a thinner) for polyester resins. Polyester resins are combined with fiberglass cloth to laminate over polyurethane foam blanks to make surfboards. The addition of styrene monomer can reduce physical properties and effect cure times.

SURFACE AGENT (ABBREVIATED S.A.)

A styrene wax solution used to cause polyester resin to cure tack free. Must be added to a non-waxed resin to enable sanding. S.A. allows the surface of polyesters to cure. It limits adhesion of another coat of resin if the first is thoroughly cured. It may be removed by sanding.

SWAYLOCK

Mike Paler’s childhood nickname.

T-BAND

Traditionally, two redwood stringers with a balsa stringer between them, all glued together. A reverse T band has the lighter color wood on the outside. A foam T band is two wood stringers with a foam insert (of specified width) between them.

TACK-FREE

A condition in which a plastic material can be dented with an inert object without sticking to it. It is indicative of a definite stage of hardening.

TAILBLOCK

A block, typically of layers of wood or glass, attached to the tail of a surfboard. Protects the tail and looks good too.

TAIL WIDTH

The width of the tail (rear) end of a surfboard, always measured 12” up from the tip of the tail.

TEMPLATE

1) The template or planshape is the outline of a surfboard viewed from overhead, with the nose at the front, rails down the side, and tail at the back.

2) Templates are used for the initial outlining of a foam blank by marking out the desired outline, which is then sawed out of the blank. Templates are often made of thin plywood or masonite and can be reused many times (a throw-away template can be made of cardboard or even paper). Templates can be combined in different ways and/or used like French curves to “connect the dots” on new outline.

TINT

A color additive put in resin to obtain a transparent or translucent color. Tints do not contain solids, and their use results in a resin that is translucent. The intensity of the color is raised by using more tint in the mix. See Pigment

TOE-IN

Toe-in is the angle of the fin relative to the stringer, i.e. the front of the fin is closer to the stringer than the rear of the fin. A single fin has no toe-in, as the stringer and fin are pointed dead ahead. Some (but not all) side fins have toe-in. E.g. A traditional fish has no toe-in because the fins are parallel to the stringer. Side fins on thrusters, twinzers, twin fins (other than traditional Fish) and quads are usually toed-in a small amount (1/8 inch to ¼ inch or so). Tow-in (note spelling difference) requires a jet ski or similar equipment.

ULTRAVIOLET (abbreviated UV)

Ultraviolet or UV light is electromagnetic radiation in the part of the spectrum between visible light and X-rays. These wavelengths of light (100-400 nm, which includes UVA, UVB and UVC) cannot be seen by the human eye BUT are very bad for your eyes.

Ultraviolet catalysts can be mixed with resins, which then cure when exposed to UV light. Brand names of pre-mixed UV resins include Solarez and Suncure.

V (or VEE)

An angle in the bottom of a surfboard that looks like a V shape when viewed from the front or rear of the surfboard.

VINYLESTER

A laminating resin that is processed much like polyester, but has cured properties similar to some epoxy resins.

VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS (abbreviated VOC)

Carbon-containing chemical compounds (e.g., solvents or liquids) that evaporate readily at ambient or process temperatures. Environmental, safety and health regulations often limit exposure to these compounds, making low VOC content is preferable.

VOLAN

Also known as CHROME FINISH (VOLAN ‘A’) due to presence of chromium. Applied to glass fibers to give good bonding to polyester and epoxy resins. A sizing or finish applied to fiberglass fabric during the manufacturing process. If used with no pigments, volan cloth will appear to have a slight greenish tint; volan boards typically have cut laps as free laps would show and be unattractive. Standard Volan finish is compatible with polyester, vinyl ester and epoxy resins. Volan laminates tend to dent rather than crack. See Silane

WARP GLASS

Fiberglass woven with more yarn in the warp (length) direction for the purpose of added stiffness and buckling resistance. (Yarn in the other direction is called fill or woof).

WET-OUT

To fill with resin; the condition of an impregnated fabric or roving when substantially all voids between the strands are filled with resin.

WIDE POINT

The widest single point on a surfboard, measured from rail to rail, across the stringer. Not necessarily the same as the midpoint, which is simply halfway between the nose and the tail.

WING

Also known as a bump, or stinger. A wing is a point on the rail that sticks out noticeably from the rail behind it (closer the rear of the board).

WORKING LIFE

The time during which a liquid resin after mixing with catalyst and/or other compounding ingredients, remains usable. Also known as pot life.

YARN

Continuously twisted fibers or strands used to weave fabrics, e.g. fiberglass.

Z

If you leave a surfboard in a car on a sunny day it may adopt a Z shape. Unlike V, nobody tries to put Z in their surfboard.

Awesome, thanks Keith…

Wow, Keith! I do believe I owe you several cold ones.

Best regards and thanks

doc…

KICK (2) v. a sudden increase in the hardening rate of liquid resin, sometimes accompanied by an increase in temperature.

this is good - new entries, corrections, etc. All errors in the glossary are mine, and all suggestions are welcome!

This is kind of unrelated but I’ve been wondering about it for a while. Is MEKP really a catalyst? Will resin cure by itself eventually? Why doesn’t it cure in the container? I suppose being away from light and oxygen prevents much of a reaction from taking place, but after years wouldn’t something happen? If MEKP is really a catalyst then it wouldn’t cause a reaction, only speed it up. Again, it doesn’t really matter, I was just wondering.

And you have MEKP as “MEPK” in the glossary under the entry for “catalyst,” which you might fix if this is going to become a resource (which it should).

Hey Doc - you don’t owe me anything, but if we can get together for a couple of cold ones sometime, that would be great!

PS I was thinking of putting some pictures in the glossary but that’s not my forte…you seem to be pretty good at it though!

Heh - any time, man, any time. Cold beer, warm rum or whatever you like for pictures…

Would anyone mind if I was to use their pictures from the archives to illustrate some of the terms?

Thanks

doc…

heck I was expecting a picture of the ultimate glossing room…you know like a nursery…ambrose…definitiary deluxicon ambitious and somewhat satisfying with a woody nose and a springtime bouquet i feel it would go well with conversation and a mild cheese perhaps with a heavy rye… and granny smith slices…this kind of intoxicant clears the mind and set a common ground from which the clarity of understanding approaches digital harmony…

Hey doc…

That’s a big project, but more than worthwhile. I’m fairly adept in Illustrator and Photoshop. If you’d care for a sidekick I’m always there to help. Could split up some entries or something.

Hey Swaylock:

Any chance in having a glossary section in this great new BB? I know you’ve spent lots of time in the past few weeks working in… not to push. But that would be cool.

I’m no chemist, but everything I’ve read lists MEKP as a catalyst or initiator. As the catalyst mixes with the resin, a chemical reaction occurs, creating heat which cures (hardens) the resin, even though its at room temperature. Resin should be stored in a cool environment since “at elevated temperatures polymerization may take place”

BY THE WAY:

MEKP is a strong irritant. Avoid swallowing and all contact with eyes and skin. Ingestion can be fatal! Discard contaminated clothing. Wash contaminated skin thoroughly with soap and water. If swallowed, take large quantities of milk or water and immediately call a physician. MEKP in the eye may result in irreversible blindness, even if flushed out with water! Flush the eyes immediately with water. SECONDS COUNT! Continue flushing for at least 30 minutes, and call a physician. Do not take chances with this chemical.

Very nice!

One question…

LAMINATING RESIN and GLOSS RESIN seem to always be called by these names. But, I’ve heard the resin used after the laminating resin called surfacing resin, sanding resin, finishing resin, etc… Is there a correct name for this resin?

Great job, it would be a good thing to have hang off the front page.

Here is a link to another glossary that I have read through before, maybe a merge would be worth while.

http://www.surfline.com/surfology/surfology_a2z_index.cfm

Related note:

I for one would like to see a board type list (glossary) either incorporated or seperate that defines different standard shapes (egg, fish, longboard, noserider, thruster, gun… ) with sample standard dimensions for each. A step further would be size guide and outlines (or board photos). A step further would be standard design characteristics, like nose concave, 50/50 rails, tail kick… for a nose rider. And recommended wave type/conditions.

I don’t know what other sort of board designs/shapes are out there but I’m sure there are others. Having looked at different sights I have a sence of this info for the boards I am now interested in, but not for others.

Personally I am in the process of collecting this info for an egg I want to build, kind of a sumarization of the archives, and collectiong of the web.

None the less, great job on the glossary

–4est

check this out:

http://www.surfline.com/mag/features/anatomy/anatomy_flash.html

isn’t it cool?

im in the learning process and i found that pretty useful

its obvious to me that this Is the glossry for the swaylocks site…this stellar effort must take on historic significance deliniating “truth” as percieved by Mellvile as in webster Noah and Merriam respectively I herby nominate the senator from the great estate of Santo Diego as the exchecquer of the "What does that mean "? continium.defining terms is of utmost importance…as set forth in the humpty dumpty section of alice in wonderland …without common held deffinition terms errode to the state the term fish has attained…does it mean anything now that there are whale fish,rocket fish.and interminable other additions … the Mellville Glossary could easily be confused with Herman the mellvile and accrue instant uninditeable credibility…TAlly Ho log my vote or nomination as is the case…ambrose…if I were to write the word index the meanings would be skewed about 97 degrees

tenover - Nice photo on the user profile.I was at Rincon that day and saw Matt Howard riding the Coopperfish in very challenging conditions, 6’-8’ w/ strong offshores. Is this you, or just an admirer? If I remember correctly the photo was taken by Dave Puu, or Jim Pidgeon.

glad you liked the glossary.

It wouldn’t be right to “merge” with the surfline glossary, even if Swaylocks wanted to include definitions of “gnarly” (‘often misused’) and “macking”. They are really aiming at a different audience anyway, and their glossary perhaps could stand some fact-checking.

(Balsa only grows in Equador? not… a nautical mile is the same as a knot? NOT! a knot is a nautical mile/hour, which is a rate of speed (1.15 mph) rather than a distance)

Dave Parmenter did a really nice version of the other potential reference you raised – description of types of boards, their dimensions, design features, etc. It was beautiful. I can’t find it on surfline anymore, or I’d post a link to it…

If somebody did one for Swaylocks, perhaps it could link to board photos already in the resources section for examples…

Are you talking about the surfboard anatomy by Parmenter? That’s in the resources section… or just go here

http://www.surfline.com/mag/features/anatomy/index.html

Keith, This could go on and on. It could end up being quite an undertaking. Don’t forget Polystyrine, EPS, EXP, fin box, glass rope. the list may just be endless.

Nice to pull this together. There are endless entries that could be made and is it is growing all the time. I picked up Matt Warshaws “The Encyclopedia of Surfing” a while back and it had over 1500 entries.