SMTH Shapes Sunny Sting Surfboard

SMTH Shapes Sunny Sting

The Sunny Sting is a revamped memorable classic blast from the past.


Dimensions

5’5” x 19.00” x 2.13” | 23.65
5’6” x 19.13” x 2.19” | 24.80
5’7” x 19.25” x 2.25” | 26.13
5’8” x 19.38” x 2.31” | 27.42
5’9” x 19.50” x 2.38” | 28.76
5’10” x 19.63” x 2.44” | 30.12
5’11” x 19.75” x 2.50” | 31.54
6’0” x 19.75” x 2.50” | 32.00
6’0” x 20.00” x 2.50” | 32.35
6’0” x 20.00” x 2.56” | 33.15
6’1” x 20.00” x 2.56” | 33.62
6’2” x 20.25” x 2.63” | 35.33
6’3” x 20.50” x 2.69” | 37.10
6’4” x 20.75” x 2.75” | 38.93
6’5” x 21.00” x 2.81” | 40.81

From the Shaper

“Like most surfboard models we want the back 1/3 of the board to react better, go faster, and be more functional! This is the concept behind the Sting. We want a craft with a taste of the past that incorporates today’s modern performance features.”

Graham Smith

The REAL Deal

SMTH Shapes Sunny Sting

The Sunny Sting is a revamped memorable classic blast from the past.


SMTH Shapes Sunny Sting Surfboard

Dimensions

5’5” x 19.00” x 2.13” | 23.65
5’6” x 19.13” x 2.19” | 24.80
5’7” x 19.25” x 2.25” | 26.13
5’8” x 19.38” x 2.31” | 27.42
5’9” x 19.50” x 2.38” | 28.76
5’10” x 19.63” x 2.44” | 30.12
5’11” x 19.75” x 2.50” | 31.54
6’0” x 19.75” x 2.50” | 32.00
6’0” x 20.00” x 2.50” | 32.35
6’0” x 20.00” x 2.56” | 33.15
6’1” x 20.00” x 2.56” | 33.62
6’2” x 20.25” x 2.63” | 35.33
6’3” x 20.50” x 2.69” | 37.10
6’4” x 20.75” x 2.75” | 38.93
6’5” x 21.00” x 2.81” | 40.81

From the Shaper

“Like most surfboard models we want the back 1/3 of the board to react better, go faster, and be more functional! This is the concept behind the Sting. We want a craft with a taste of the past that incorporates today’s modern performance features.”

Graham Smith

The REAL Deal


SMTH Shapes’ Description

Mid-July 1985 Sunny introduced me to his Aipa Stinger’s, both he and Shmoo had been riding Ben’s stingers months before them arriving to complete in the Gunston 500.

At that time I was licensed to T&C Hawaii and Sunny was staying with me. When he pulled boards out from his board bags I was intrigued by the way Ben had blended the Stinger-wing to fit and flow in the rail outline. The attention to detail in the rail design was outstanding! 

The break in the rail where the sting is situated is very functional and carries volume forward. Behind the Sting, the wing pulls in reducing area and straightens up the rail line through to the tail. This transformation helps to carry speed but still allows for positive control and maneuverability. The slightly wider nose area allows you to have extra float and paddle power. The tail section is pulled in as the wing cuts it’s way into the rail blending towards the tail section with a straighter rail curve allowing you to pivot at will. This is the main function behind the Sting. 

Like most surfboard models we want the back 1/3 of the board to react better, go faster, and be more functional! This is the concept behind the Sting. We want a craft with a taste of the past that incorporates today’s modern performance features.

Board Features
  • The bottom rocker consists of a low natural curve with a modern deep concave running through the hull into a flatter curve in the tail.
  • The Outline consists of a two-stage theory. As the nose outline is slightly wider than normal with soft forgiving rails whereas behind the Sting which is situated at +-20″ up from the tail the outline pulls in, causing the rail-line to straighten up. The straighter rail line adds more drive and enhances speed when burying the rail.
  • The rails play a huge part in maintaining speed because of its design in the tail section. The rail starts with a rolled medium-soft tuck and becomes boxy behind the wing with a hard “off the bottom” edge. The boxy upright rail behind the sting prevents water from sucking onto it, thus frees up the tail. Less drag and more speed!
 

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