High Pro Log

I feel like this is where boards could have gone in ‘67 if they didn’t go shorter. I guess you could say it's what I’d consider a performance-centric traditional longboard. We call it the High Pro Log as a bit of a joke and I suppose expecting anything high performance other than heaps of speed and a bit of squirt would be a mistake. Its design characteristics are more like late 1960’s Australian longboards than anything - with the one main difference between the bottom shape around the fin and the rail in the last six inches of the tail.

The High Pro log has a super foiled rail with a rolled bottom, a great Aussie combo! The roll blends into a panel vee around the fin and it has a tucked edge through the last couple of inches of rail. The tucked edge is shaped not glassed so it’s nothing extreme, but it does give the board that super interesting little squirt and speed through turns. It’s an amazing noserider too, but unlike some easy to noseride boards you have to be locked in trim and running through fast sections to get the most out of it, which I suppose requires a certain amount of talent. I can’t get off mine when the Noosa Points or DI do their fast-spinning-shallow-hollow down-the-line thing - the HP log is probably the only board that is truly at home when it’s peeling at mach-10. It’s fair to say that this is somewhat of a luxury board as it's not really your average daily rider, but for the same reason it’s one hell of a ride - anything but average.

Length Width Thickness volume
9'4 22 3/4/ 2 7/8 67.5
9'6 22 7/8" 3" 72.3
9'8 23 1/16 3 1/8 77.3
9'10 23 1/8 3 1/4 82.2
10' 23 1/4 3 3/8 87.4

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High Pro Log

wide point back involvement style log

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