23 . 09 . 17
When making surfboards, accuracy, symmetry and attention to detail are essential considerations. Our wooden surfboards use a skin-on-frame construction method, and in the pursuit of the above James designs each of the Otter Surfboards models using specialist design software and then cuts the parts of the framework (the interconnecting stringer and ribs) around which our surfboards are built using a CNC router (CNC stands for ‘Computer Numerically Controlled’). This process allows us to consistently reproduce the hollow wooden ‘blank’ of each of our models, within which there is a tolerance for the finer points of the surfboard’s outline and rail profiles to be adjusted by the shaper – be that James or somebody attending a workshop course. It’s a great example of how a maker can use digital technology to create the best possible product, time and time again. If we cut each part of our internal frames by hand it would take an enormous amount of time and would be far harder to replicate components consistently and, most importantly, to the micro-millimeter degree of accuracy that our surfboards demand.