davenport surfboards online catalog 2012
DESCRIPTION
An onlune catalog of current offerings from Davenport Surfboards. Enjoy!TRANSCRIPT
Davenport Surfboards7807 Anise Avenue
Westchester, CA 90045
(310) 462-8569
www.davenportlongboards.com
for dealer and custom order inquiries please contact us!
Davenport Surfboards are available at the following shops:
Mollusk Surf Shop
1600 Pacific AvenueVenice Beach, CA 90291
(310) 396-1969
Wave Front Surf Shop
154 East Thompson Boulevard Ventura, CA 93001(805) 652-2201
Moondoggies Beach Club
781 Dolliver Street Pismo Beach, CA 93449
(805) 773-1995
If there were an El Camino of surfboards this would be it. A solid classic with clean semi-parallel template and a rolled bottom to tail with some blended concave in the nose. The rocker is flat in the middle for speed with a kick in the tail for whippy turns.
Length: 9’ 6” - 10’ 6” Nose: 18“ - 19” Width: 23” - 24” Tail: 16” - 17” Thickness: 3 1/8” - 3 3/8”
Recommended fins:
sparkyRick Noserider
* ”UFO” Scoop Tail Concave design help to maintain hold in the pocket while the rider is on the nose.
The “El Cadjeo” is simply the deadliest noserider in the line up. A pure and classic noserider designed to whip turns for walking the board and hanging ten....It’s that simple. It’s that smooth. Consider yourself warrned! Length: 9’4” - 10’6” Nose: 17 3/4” - 18 5/8” Width: 22 7/8” - 23 5/8” Tail: 16” - 16 3/4” Thickness: 3” - 3 3/8”
El Cadejo
recommended fins:
Bendickson Noserider Rick Noserider sparky
Length: 9’0” - 10’ 6” Nose: 16 1/2” - 18” Width: 22” - 23 1/2” Tail: 15 3/4“ - 16 1/2” Thickness: 3” - 3 3/8”
Conceived on the barstools of the legendary Harbor Room by Mr. Davenport and Mr. Factor after one too many stiff whiskey cannonballs, straight no chaser, the "On the Rocks" model should not be confused with the marketing scheme surrounding the nomenclature "Log." "Logs" are for lumberjacks, limp wristed cutbacks, ballerina slow motion tip toes, and kiddie park roller-coasters for junior. No baseball bat rails or silly trendy dug-out canoe concave, yet it can noseride...just not in the shoulder. So, forget any "just the tip" action on the flats. Frontal action is a functional maneuver and not a donkey-show pony-trick. With rails so slippery in the water and the slide so quick, no lube is necessary. A beer gut-belly in the center of the board proves that the "On the Rocks" model leaves the light beers for the ladies. Yet, the thin foil may suggest that the "On the Rocks" model might also have added a third pun to it's namesake. Gouging cutbacks, back-breaking jives, el rollos, halting kick stalls, deep turkey-stuffed noserides and heavy enough to scare hipsters back to their hulls, the "On the Rocks" just might be the perfect concoction for you! Bring some CLASS back to the Beach and tip the bartender.
A board like nothing in the line up today. A wide body pig templated small wave noserider. This board features a flat nose with a kicked up tail. The nose has a lip for lift, 50/50 pinched middle rails for nose riding, and a 60/40 up turned railed V tail.
Length: 9’8” - 10’6” Nose: 18 1/4” - 19 1/4” Width: 23 1/2” - 24 1/4” Tail: 17 1/4” Tail Block: 10“ Thickness: 3 1/8” - 3 3/8”
Suggested Fins:
Rick Rudder Rick Noserider iggy
Teamrider Matt Sagraves on a 9’10” The Thing.
An authentic early 60’s pig, with full hips, narrow nose, and medium tail width. The pig has neutral 50/50 rails all the way around with long clean rocker with some tail kick. Super long noserides, nasty drop knee cut backs, and loads of style come standard with this model.
Length: 9’ - 10’ 6” Nose: 15 1/2” - 17” Width: 21 1/2” - 23”- Tail: 15 1/2” - 16 1/2” Thickness: 3 1/8” - 3 3/8”
The PiG
Recommended Fins:
Con D jacobs lance carson d
velzy noserider greenough 4a
A classic pintail with glide and superior noseriding capabilities. This board has low nose rocker for steering from the tip and a long drawn out middle with a kicked up tail for cutting back. The rails have a lip in the front to 50/50 pinched in the middle to a turned up roll in the back to help rotation and smooth out the turns and enhance the glide.
ength: 9’4” - 10’ 6” Nose: 17” - 18 5/8” Width: 22” - 23 5/8” Tail: 14“ - 15 1/2” Thickness: 3 1/8” - 3 3/8”
Recommended Fins:
sparky Zeke
Step DeckThe Stepdeck is designed to enhance turning and responsiveness. With reduced volume in the nose the board turns and pivots faster due to the decreased weight in the front end. Combine this with a parallel template and proper tail rocker and this board becomes a super responsive noserider. The tail has our signature “UFO” scoop to help maintain hold in the pocket while the rider is on the tip.
Length: 9’0” - 10’6” Nose: 16 3/4” - 18 3/8” Width: 22 3/8” - 23 5/8” Tail: 15 1/4” - 16 1/2” Thickness: 3” - 3 3/8”
greenough stage 3 Slick
Recommended Fins:
Sparky
Classic Logo TankRemember, summer is a state of mind when your wearing the Tank. Available in navy only. Sizes M - XL.
$10
Classic logo tee shown here in Vintage Blue. Also, available in white, black, sage, navy, and olive. Sizes
s-XXL.
$10
Classic Logo Sticker PackSpread the love with a pack of four Classic
'Longboards Shaped by Davenport' Stickers. Stickers are vinyl and measure 2"x5".C
$1.50
Classic Logo zip-up hoodie Perfect for those early morning surf checks.
Available in Navy only.
$35
10.5” Rick Noserider finThe perfect fin to accompany any serious noserider. Made
with pride in the good ol' USA by Fibre Glas Fin Co. Currently available in smoke and black & yellow.
$70
All Goods available at the Davenport Online Store... http://davenportsurfboards.bigcartel.com
10” Sparky Fin
A great All-Around Fin. Made by the good folks at Fibre Glas Fin CoCurrently Available in black and smoke.
$65
Other Goods...
Before you categorized Post Doggerism as something, "retro," "single fin," "vintage", or the worst nomenclature in surfing, "Log," you must take a step back and look at it in "the whole grand scheme of things" (Tudor, "The Present"). To digress a bit...I hate the word, "Log." Log is what mainstream society as well as so-called alternative equipment aficio-nados categorize single fin heavy surfboards (even though most of them are not) in an effort to grasp the different approaches it takes to ride a board inspired by the the original Golden Age of Surfing, pre 1966. Most of these sud jockeys haven't a clue as they just have been tuned in. I was surfing with Precious, aka Chiz, at the point a few months back and we both acknowledged how much the scene has changed. Ten years ago, it was entirely different...thruster longboards, with their inspiration of bad 80's surfing, was norm. Now in our present times, families pile out of their family-style ginormous Winnebago's loaded to the "T" with Bings, or "Logs," for Mommy, Brother, Sister, and Daddy, and place these "logs" on custom board racks next to the barbecue and Bocce Ball set. And, there's nothing wrong with that. The cats I grew up surfing with, who were all gremlins inspired by the Second Golden Age of riding heavy-set longer equip-ment (Matt Howard, Tyler, Farberow, Wegener, Tudor, etc), were a bit out of the social surf norm."Longboard's Rules," stickers where the norm as a way to self identify against the then contemporary times thruster surfer. (Which, I can also say I enjoy... Tear Devils 2, one of my favorite surf movies of all time, before you quickly categorize me). But then again, most of the sand crabs who stamped their VW westys back windows with the "Longboard Rules" likely never had the ability to ride a conventional thruster. Before the "ride everything movement," which Campbell brought to the masses courtesy of "Sprout," with Machado and Tudor in that board-orgy, swinging, honeymoon in Costa Rica, longboarding and shortboarding were pretty black and white. Either you did, one...or the other. During this time period of the Early 2000s, Parmenter wrote a piece in Surfer Magazine, called "Dawning of the Morning of the Earth," that gives flack to the casual cats riding inspiration inspired from the original golden era. If you look at that feature, it shows a young Robbie Kegel, in full Tyler "test pilot" apparatus, waxing his brand new Tyler surfboard underneath "insert name," Pier. (I am guessing Newport) Underneath the picture, Robbie, with his swooping "Murph the Surf" gremmie hairdo, Parmenter says something in the lines of "in California, you expect a full backward-assness." This is the same Parmenter who rode a longboard in the 80s at Huntington pier in a shortboard contest to prove a point about how bad the judging was at the time in shitty 2-foot Orange County beach slop...but some how, he didn't get it. Maybe he was just too close to the original Hotdog-ging era, to yet understand? To tighten up the piece, there was a time period where Robbie being so inspired from the Original and the 2nd Generation Golden era, would get punched out on a monthly basis in surf line-ups for just being so possessed, so different. I believe there was a entire summer where young Robbie had a black eye. And then...he started Creme. To wrap this shit up, Logging is for motherfucking Lumber Jacks. Case to the point, I surfed with Tyler today at Tyler Point in El Porto, Ca. Tyler does not surf a log. No where does the nomenclature even register in his lexicon. Tyler just rips, postdog-ging it up by adding his own bits of flair from other places from his rich surfing background.
Logs...
Edfactor
For more on all things Postdogger check out Edfactor's blog @ http://postdoggerexpressions.blogspot.com/
310.462.8569