ayout 1 - Tomo Surfboards
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ayout 1 - Tomo Surfboards
Daniel Thomson and TheSpeed ofPhi “Everywhere in the ocean we can see spiral energy —from perfect barreling waves to spinning storms,” says Thomson. “Wouldn’t it make sense to apply a constant of phi to the geometry of surfboards?” IAN OROARTY By Richard Kenvin July 31, 1949. A potent mid-summer swell is blasting the Malibu coast. Sometime in the afternoon a photographer named Bob Prosser stands on the point and captures an image of Bob Simmons streaking across a long, dark wall. Simmons rockets down the line in perfect trim, slouched in a parallel stance while his self-shaped board leaves a ruler-straight wake behind him. The curious foam trail does not look like one left by a surfboard. It looks more like the vapor trail of a jet or the wake of a speeding powerboat. This makes sense. Simmons, who referred to his boards as “machines,” applied some of the same mathematical formulas that naval architects and aeronautical engineers used in designing their own crafts. If he was following anything, it was the language of mathematics—set forth by Archimedes, Fibonacci, Bernoulli, and Lindsay Lord. In the foreground of Prosser’s photo, a woman in ’40s bathing attire stands at the shoreline with two young children, holding an inner tube. In the wide scope of the image these are the only souls present, preserving a beach scene one might find at the height of writer Raymond Chandler’s noir Los Angeles. In Chandler’s LA nothing was as it appeared on the surface. It was only through looking beyond the obvious that the story underlying any character, setting, or plot was revealed. Like a clue that would lead one of Chandler’s detectives to his next revelation, Prosser’s photograph is a little piece of evidence with a story to tell. The clues in this case connect over decades. In 20 years, Simmons’ key design features will gain a foothold among a cadre of shapers. Yet another 12 years pass before his principles are 105 BOB PROSSER (above) Bob Prosser’s 1949 Malibu photograph served as a time capsule across decades, preserving an early look at the result of surfboard shaping as science. 106 grafted into mainstream design. From there, another 20 years follow before Daniel Thomson rides replicas of Simmons’ planing hulls and studies Lindsay Lord’s Naval Architecture of Planing Hulls. The experience permanently alters his perspective on design. As a result he builds a series of ultra high performance surfboards he calls “modern planing hulls,” which form the appropriate acronym MPH. Charles Eames once said in regard to design that “eventually, everything connects.” Daniel Thomson can relate to that statement. For most of his 31 years he has been seeking and absorbing knowledge passed on by a handful of individuals. In the process he’s gained an understanding of hydrodynamic principles that makes it impossible for him to look at board design outside the context of those who shaped before him. But Daniel doesn’t live in the past. He takes what he’s learned and uses it like a torch to illuminate the dim catacomb of trial and error in surfboard design. Shining a light on half-a-century of concepts enables him to identify what works and apply it to his craft. Daniel knows exactly how Simmons fits into the boards he makes today, from the aspect ratio of their planing surface, to the lack of curve in their outline, on down to the placement of the fins. What history suggests is that every design will eventually reach its limitations. Progression comes from BILLY WATTS (right) Before his design breakthroughs in 2009, Thomson’s shaping and surfing explored the merits and limitations of pre-existing surfboards. design first and surfing ability second, with the greatest leaps forward coming not from slow refinement but from radical departures from the norm. Few modern shapers, like Thomson, have developed their talent as both surfers and craftsmen to explore the limits of their own designs. Perhaps there will never be another Mark Richards or Simon Anderson—surfers who combined their surfing and ingenuity to forever alter future design. Whatever the case, Daniel Thomson is far too humble to pretend to fill the shoes of MR or Anderson. Similar to the great surfer-shapers of the past, Daniel’s work is driven by a desire to improve his surfing. Hardly an alternative tripper or retro dreamer, it would suit him just fine if his designs gained prominence at the highest levels of competitive surfing. April 11, 1981. Daniel Thomson is born in Australia, less than a fortnight before Simon Anderson’s historic thruster debut at Bells. It’s a fitting birthdate, as Daniel is truly a child of the thruster era. It’s also the first of many connections to key historical figures and events in surfing that result from the circumstances he was born into. His father, Mark Thomson, has a simple philosophy regarding board design: anything that works can always be improved, if not by design, then by materials. Stagnation is not tolerated. Progression is mandatory. The Thomson household in Lennox Head became an evolutionary crucible from Daniel’s earliest years. All manner of surfboards were tested but it was strictly survival of the fittest. Designs that lasted, such as the thruster, were continually enhanced with flex-tails, blade fins, and carbon fiber construction. Daniel’s world was peopled with an intimidating roster of highly talented and influential surfers. Bob McTavish taught his father how to shape boards, while Tom Curren, Brad Gerlach, and Donavon Frankenreiter often visited to test boards and talk design. These guys were a part of Daniel’s day-to-day upbringing. Yet to avoid being overshadowed by his father, for the past eight years he’s traveled the world, supporting himself by shaping boards and landing the odd sponsorship for his surfing ability. After seeing the world and spending a year in Japan, he’s settled in California, occasionally returning to his home at Lennox. RYAN FIELD 109 HILTON DAWE (above, l-to-r) Shapes by Matt Kivlin, Joe Quigg, and Bob Simmons. From a design perspective, the much debated question of whom first developed the precursor to the contemporary shortboard is irrelevant to Thomson. He places each one on trial and combines their virtuous characteristics as needed. In 2004 Daniel crossed paths with a small fleet of San Diego fish boards brought to Australia by the Hydrodynamica Project. The boards were shaped by Steve Lis, Skip Frye, Larry Mabile, and Rich Pavel, and offered a good cross-section of designs that evolved from Lis’ original 1967 kneeboards. Daniel settled in on a 5'7" Pavel with swept back Gephart keels. On May 9, with the surf pumping down the point at Lennox, Daniel took out the little Pavel fish and put on a searing exhibition of pure Australian power surfing. Here, he decided, was a high performance design worthy of further investigation and possible enhancement. Mark and Daniel began building and riding racy, futuristic, blade-keeled, carbon fiber fishes—a series of boards they dubbed the Drongos. They were seeking ways to blend thruster precision with the planing speed of the fish, and they succeeded up to a point. Eventually they hit a performance plateau where the application of modern shortboard curves and rockers couldn’t be further combined with a fish. Soon after, Daniel traveled to San Diego for the first time, where he would be introduced to the planing hull boards of Bob Simmons, an experience that would later lead him off the Drongo plateau onto an even higher level of performance. Later that year Daniel met 72-year-old John Elwell. Elwell had known Simmons in 1949; Simmons had handed him a dated print of Prosser’s photo. Almost single-handedly, Elwell preserved and researched Simmons’ work on hydrodynamic planing hulls after his death in 1954. From Elwell’s perspective, the Lis fish design was closely related to Simmons’ planing hull, more so than any other surfboard of the post-Simmons era. John took a keen interest in Thomson’s fish surfing, and explained the workings of the fish in the context of Simmons’ hydrodynamic theory. “I had never heard of or seen such an intricate, scientific design formula applied to a surfboard before,” says Thomson of his early visits with Elwell. “I thought: if we can know now what Simmons knew then, there is a pretty good chance we can apply that understanding to a modern, high performance board and really achieve something special.” Pulling his 1950 Simmons dual-fin down from the rafters, Elwell showed Thomson the fundamental characteristics it shared with the fish. “It really inspired me to understand the functional (left) The craftsman at one with his craft. “Through applying phi to the designs they become synchronized with nature,” says Thomson. “It’s an amazing feeling.” dynamics of fluid and how it interacted with objects and hulls specific to surfing.” Under Elwell’s guidance, Daniel became one of the first surfers to ride a Simmons planing hull in the 21st century. At Windansea in December of 2005, during a massive winter swell, Daniel paddled a 30-pound balsa replica of Elwell’s 9'0" planing hull to an outer-reef in triple-overhead-plus conditions. He made some steep, dramatic drops and streaked across some big walls. The experience left him with a deep respect for Simmons and his concepts. “The board performed so well, and those were the waves he designed it for,” said Thomson, years later. In April of 2007, Thomson rode Casper, the first of the mini Simmons boards, on some clean pointbreak walls DAWE (above) Mark and Daniel Thomson have access to a fleet of test pilots for their crafts, including Chris Del Moro (center). 110 in southern Baja. At 6'0" x 23" x 3", it provided more than ample flotation, but he was still able to go through a series of modern turns on his first ride. “The fact that we can ride that thing in a relatively modern way, hitting the lip and getting barreled on a board that was designed so long ago is a testament to how functional Simmons’ concepts are.” Afterward he mused on the potential of trimming it down and scaling it into a “super short, parallel-railed little board —a little ollie machine.” Instead of getting swept up in the mini Simmons craze (short versions of Simmons’ boards with roughly the same width, rocker, and keels as the originals), Daniel went back to Australia and began experimenting with planing hull-inspired shapes that combined modern shortboards with his own unique innovations. His mission was to design the highest performing surfboards ever made, using Simmons as the foundation, and World Tour level surfing as the performance criteria. During this time he also began looking at wakeboards. He saw them as highly effective designs that worked at high speeds under the same principles as the Simmons boards. With everything scaled down to minimal size, they were exactly what he was after. “I was running errands on the Gold Coast and I spotted a wakeboard shop near where I was buying some materials. DAVE FRANKEL (right) The most precise feedback for Daniel is still provided underfoot. Cutting a decidedly futuristic silhouette is mere icing. I stopped in and eyed some of these minimalistic volume 4'6" parallel hulls. I thought, why the fuck wouldn’t that work insane?” Daniel got to work. He designed futuristic “raptor” split fish tails, space age channel and concave configurations, and blade keel fin combinations. Then, in one final burst of inspiration, he dialed in his modern planing hull concept with four boards shaped back-to-back in less than two weeks. “The month of June 2009 in Australia was a huge moment for my board designs,” Daniel says. “The whole parallel-outline, mini-planing hull board concept gelled in my mind. I got in the garage of my rental in Lennox Head and started redesigning my templates with more parallel lines.” First, Thomson shaped the MPH, a 5'2"x 17 ½" x 2" thruster. The following day he shaped the Vector, a 5'4" x 18 ¼" x 2¼" quad that was more radical in its design: a wide, multi bat-tail—designed to be controlled with extreme concave. With the MPH formula solidified in his mind and the newly applied principles of wakeboard designs, he shaped the Deathstar, a twin-tipped 4'11", which measured just 17" wide. At that point, says Thomson, “traditional volume measurements had become irrelevant.” He phoned his father, who agreed with the design breakthroughs in theory but wanted to see the boards ridden first. The following day Daniel shaped a 4'7" x 17 ½” x 2 ¼”, Vader, a compliment to the Deathstar but with softer features. That summer he returned to California with the Nano and Vector but left the Deathstar and Vader behind. “At the last minute I kind of freaked out about how people would react to the Deathstar and the Vader,” he recalls. “I wondered, are people really ready for this? So I stashed them in my closet in Lennox and didn’t bring them to the states.” On the way he stopped in Japan and entered a 4-star WQS event, placing 5th riding a 5'6" Nano dual-fin. Fresh off the plane in California he took a 5'2" x 17¼" Nano dual-fin out at Windansea, doing airs and sliding on the lip like he was toying with a snake run in a skate park. In September, he exhibited his new boards at the Sacred Craft surfboard exposition in Del Mar and won Best of Show with the Nano tri-fin. The event, which has been running in California since 2007, draws some of the biggest names in the surfboard industry. DAWE (above) Logging more empirical evidence off the bottom, the mad scientist at his Lennox laboratory. PIERRE TOSTEE (left) Stu Kennedy—Durban, South Africa. “I’ve known Stu since he was about 11 years old,” says Daniel, who enjoyed no shortage of surfing and shaping mentorship in his younger years. “I kind of took him under my wing and trained him on all things surf related.” In 2011, Daniel pulled the Deathstar and Vader from his closet and returned to California. Again he proceeded to win Best of Show at Sacred Craft, this time with the Deathstar design. “I have a crew of distinguished surfboard veterans scour the Sacred Craft floor each year to determine Best of Show,” remarked the show’s founder and director, Scott Bass. “We know Daniel has won before, but we cannot overlook his stuff. It’s far ahead of everything else in here.” Wrapped in black carbon fiber cloth and tipped with sinister bat wings on the nose and tail, the Deathstar looked more like a futuristic military stealth drone than a surfboard. The outline was extremely parallel relative to the curves of a conventional board. More than any design Daniel had previously built, the Deathstar was born of theory. He had carefully studied the chapter on planing and aspect ratio in Lindsay Lord’s Naval Architecture of Planing Hulls— the same book Simmons had used. He recognized Lord’s principles at work on a large scale in the original Simmons boards of the ’40s and ’50s, and down-sized on wakeboards. The concepts in Lord’s planing hull studies rekindled Daniel’s interest in phi, also known as “the golden ratio,” which helped refine the proportions of his boards. For instance, the dimensions of the Deathstar were determined through a series of phi divisions. “For a long time me and my dad have been totally fascinated by sacred geometry and how it relates not only to forms in nature but also the structure of design,” says Daniel. “Ocean waves are an everchanging medium full of variables, hence the incredibly wide scope of design possibilities. I wanted to find a constant in those unpredictable variables, so I could formulate a specific design direction for surfing.” Daniel found that constant in the spiral geometry of phi—1.618. “I applied phi to the aspect ratio and curves of my board and found that the results are not only positive but downright mind-blowing. The boards become perfect energy deflectors that let the rider tap maximum wave energy with minimal energy output.” Thomson also took another look at the measurements of Elwell’s 1950 Simmons planing hull and made the same phi divisions he had used on the Deathstar. The measurements of the aspect ratio, the widths of the wetted planing surface from the wide point to the entry in the bow, and the exit in the stern were almost identical. The Deathstar was essentially a scaled version of the Simmons planing hull, and vice versa. “When I matched my newfound phi aspect ratio formula to the original 9'0" balsa Simmons board it matched perfectly—with less than one-percent margin of error. Through direct knowledge or incredible intuition he had the blueprint in 1950 for the ultimate performance board. Having this revealed to me was the most profound discovery of my surfing life.” Daniel had found what he was looking for, a formula that would allow him to engineer maximum performance, with minimal volume, into every square inch of his designs. The result is an extremely efficient board whose length and width are limited to the constraints of a specific formula. The Simmons-phi method gave Daniel a constant—a reference point that never changes. All manner of fin combinations worked on the designs—from zero to five fins —with little or no modification needed to accommodate them. Rocker and curve could be added or subtracted by degrees, using the constants as a starting point. On the heels of the Deathstar, in quick succession, Daniel developed three more models from his work with phi measurements and the original Simmons board. While testing his boards along the California coast, surfers begin 113 The 5’8’’ Golden Machine makes the influence of early hulls evident. PHOTOS: FIELD 8’ Simmons dual keel slotted planing hull. The Fractal, a second generation refinement of the Deathstar—based entirely on descending phi divisions. BRIAN BIELMANN TODD GLASER A few decades and a few defining sessions by surf stars usually sway the conservative tendencies of surfers toward more functional equipment. Tom Curren at Backdoor (above) and Rob Machado at Seaside, San Diego (left) campaign against popular opinion in late-2012. to take notice. At Lowers, Kolohe sees the boards and orders one custom. Later in the winter, on a west swell at Rincon, old family friend Tom Curren sees Thomson on a Deathstar and, intrigued, orders a 5'1" thruster. Then, in February 2012, Curren rides it in the Rincon Classic, a semi-local benefit event. He draws Dane Reynolds in an early round heat. The 5'1" is almost perfectly symmetrical, with a diamondshaped nose and tail of the same width, and minimal curve. It does not look like an ordinary surfboard. Spectators on the beach are heard murmuring about its similarity to a wakeboard or kiteboard. But under Curren’s feet it draws much fuller lines than a 5’1” should, blazing around whitewater sections and whipping effortlessly through super tight carves and snaps. Meanwhile, Reynolds does his thing on a thruster—tail-high air-reverses into the flats and breaking his fins free at will. It’s a formidable display of state-of-the-art surfing. But he seems to be working a little harder than Curren at gaining speed and flow between turns—even with a longer board. Curren wins the heat, though Reynolds eventually wins the contest. Given what’s known about Curren it’s not difficult to load this little showdown against Reynolds with portent and meaning. It wouldn’t be the first time that Curren made a statement with his surfing, the significance of which would not be realized until years down the road. At any rate, through Daniel, Curren has joined the ranks of the “Simmons test pilots,” a term coined by his father, Pat, decades prior. March, 2012. Daniel returns to Australia and shapes two modern planing hulls for Stuart Kennedy, a young pro from Lennox. Daniel, 10 years older than Kennedy, has become something of a mentor to him. The boards Daniel makes for Kennedy are tiny, parallel-railed boards—similar to the one he made for Curren. Kennedy’s powerful, lightning quick style shows just how fast and responsive the designs are. The tiny board planes and skates with laser-sharp precision as he drives it through his new school repertoire. The absurdly tight radius of his carves and the speed of his rotations in the air are almost cartoonish. Without hesitation Kennedy decides to ride the boards in competition. On July 31, 2012, exactly 63 years to the day that Prosser photographed Simmons at Malibu in 1949, the U.S. Open of Surfing is under way in Huntington Beach. Daniel Thomson and Stuart Kennedy are getting ready for the next heat, where Stu will face Kelly Slater. After beating Matt Wilkinson in the previous round, Wilkinson said, “I put [Kennedy’s board] under my arm this morning and it feels like nothing that I’ve ever ridden. The rails are different, the tail is different, the nose is different. Everything is just really weird on it. But he beat me.” The comments and reactions to Kennedy’s boards begin to form a compelling narrative on design conformity in professional surfing. It becomes clear just how risky it is to ride something different, as Stu’s scores tend to be lower. The coincidence of Kennedy surfing against Slater on the 63rd anniversary of Prosser’s photo makes for a clean reference point along the design evolution timeline. If Simmons were still around he’d likely wonder why everyone found it necessary to have pointed noses on their 5'10"s. Kennedy’s board strikes nearly everyone at the event as highly unusual, with the conspicuous exception of Kelly Slater, who has taken interest of his own in volume redistribution. In a beach interview he states, “I really like the direction Stu’s going with those Tomo designs. I think that’s kind of the future, to be honest.” 117 GLASER (above) With the golden ratio as a guide, Tomo’s crafts are stripped down to the essentials of form and function. 118 Seeing Stu fight his way through three rounds to a man-on-man match-up against Slater is a reward in itself for Daniel—no matter what the outcome. It’s the culmination of years of effort. But Daniel keeps his cool. He knows that in the big picture of pro surfing—where winning is everything—this is just a routine and insignificant heat, a round for the big boys to get through on their way to the finals. In the end, Slater wins it with a fairly conventional series of backside hacks on the best waves. Kennedy settles for 17th and heads for Europe, where he battles his way to a 9th place finish in the next event. After the contest, Daniel drives back to his home and shaping room in San Diego. He’s nursing a torn ligament and can’t board-surf, so he gets back into riding his air mat, blowing minds with flat-out cannonball speed runs. The simple thrill of planing on the mat puts him in a good head space for board design. He delves deeper into merging the hard science of Lindsay Lord with trial and error, seasoning it all with musings on the role of sacred geometry and phi ratio. He aspires to customize boards around an individual’s body mechanics—to flow them into the dimensions of their boards. If the universe and waves themselves contain the forms of the golden ratio, then why shouldn’t his surfboards? DAWE (right) The combination of surfing talent and shaping know-how in Simon Anderson and Mark Richards has always been uncommon—even more so as performance standards elevate. Without claiming to fill that rank, Thomson’s body of work is accumulating in undeniable ways. In the midst of these esoteric meditations, Daniel is courted by a large manufacturer that wants to massproduce his designs. If he signs a deal it will mean some financial security, and, more importantly, the freedom to focus on his passions: designing, building, and riding his own surfboards. “There’s nothing like that feeling I get,” he says. “When I make a new board and ride it, I get giddy at how good it goes.” On a grey afternoon in Southern California, Daniel sets about drawing a golden spiral from scratch on a piece of graph paper. He pencils out a golden rectangle by combining squares on the graph in the order of the Fibonacci sequence: one, two, three, five, eight. The rectangles grow proportionately larger while maintaining a ratio of phi—1.618. He then takes a compass and draws curves from corner to corner, starting with the small rectangles and flowing outward to larger ones. A golden spiral is formed. He takes a piece of tracing paper and traces the spiral, flips it over and lays the reverse image over the first spiral. At the point where opposite curves overlap, a template is formed. Even at this small, hand-drawn scale, the shape formed by the intersecting curves looks like a perfect single-fin pintail surfboard. Daniel then measures the width of the pintail and divides it by phi. He takes the sum from the division and draws lines on the nose and tail of the outline—at the point where the opposite curves are exactly same distance apart as the quotient of the phi division. A new doubleended template is formed. It’s a perfect, miniature sketch of the 4'11" Deathstar leaning against the wall beside him. Enlarged even farther it would fit almost perfectly over the 1950 Simmons planing hull in the rafters above. It’s been said that Simmons wrapped a theory around everything he did and that this backfired on him in the end. It’s even been said that ultimately this led to his death: struck in the head by a board born of his own theories. It’s been said that his boards didn’t turn, that he became irrelevant long ago, that the modern surfboard is entirely the result of trial and error. While this may have been true for many years, it isn’t anymore. Ask Daniel Thomson. ◊ Go Deeper with Daniel Thomson at www.surfersjournal.com