Isthmus Sailboards Staff Review
::2007 RRD Freestyle Wave 86::
The RRD felt loose and alive, was easy to plane and a delight to jibe. It has the best jibing of any of the boards in its class that I tested while providing excellent speed for chop hops. The 2007 sails a touch floatier than the 2006 version with its somewhat fuller nose shape and more fullness through the tail. The harder you push it, the more it delivers and always with control that gives you the confidence to go after anything you want to try.
Windsurfing Magazine
::2007 RRD Freestyle Wave 86::
What we liked: A “Top 5” pick for most
testers in virtually all performance categories.
Quick to plane, light and fast – a great jumper.
Wide nose offered ample float for rookies and
freestylers. Raised heel pads provided comfort
without deadening the ride.
Buyer Beware:
Sacrificed a tad to wave performance; felt bigger
than indicated 85 liters, making it a handful for
lightweights in higher winds.
Better Than The Fleet At:
Getting testers to try (and make) new
moves.
BEST SUITS:
Intermediate to expert
bump-and-jumpers (and freestylers) looking for
the trick stick.
Other Highlights:
Dakine straps and MFC Freewave fin were top-notch.
Boards UK
::2007 RRD Freestyle Wave 86::
Many times a test winner over the past few years, RRD have wisely not made too many
tweaks to this extremely successful design for 2007. This year’s board sees the nose lift a little
earlier and a little higher, a considerably wider nose and more vee in the underwater shape.
However, that all-important fast-tail is still very much in place. The Freestyle Wave range has
been expanded to 5 different sizes for 2007, spanning 78 to 110L.
On the water: Early planing and acceleration is excellent, right up there with the
freerides and other fast-tail boards, and it blasts comfortably on the longish flat, going upwind
with ease. Compared to other boards that can blast comfortably in low powered conditions,
the RRD feels extremely ready to jump or manoeuvre. The nose rides high, and the board
feels loose and keen to turn.
In waves its natural speed and acceleration combine with the high nose and very reliably
grippy tail to give excellent jumping, even in quite low-powered conditions. While not in the
same league of manoeuvrability as the two most wavey designs in this test, it can certainly
be thrown around extremely hard, flowing easily through tight bottom-turns and slashy topturns.
Its gybing performance is versatile and reliable. Freestyle suitability is very good with
the long flat, wide nose and tiny duck-tail all helping. The only real area where performance
suffers is in rougher water and stronger winds, when the wide nose can get quite bouncy at
speed, and lighter sailors reported it becoming unsettled.
Range: Although it will take up to 6.0-6.2m if you want to concentrate on more freeride
performance, it works best in the waves with sails of between 5.2 and 5.8m. In stronger
conditions it starts to get a bit bouncy and hectic, but within its ideal range it provides
exceptional versatility.
Fittings: Most sailors loved the spongy deckpads, though some felt they neutered the
feedback the board offers and flattened the deck a bit. (Last year’s model had superb toeraisers;
whatever happened to them?) The straps are comfy and the 25cm MFC fin suits the
board well in its ideal mid windrange. Use something a little bigger for the most marginal
winds, although this is somewhat less easy now that RRD have gone over to classic box
fitting this season in these smaller Freestyle Wave sizes (78 & 86L).
Popularity: Made most guesters’ top five including a first and a second and was much
liked by all the testers (one of whom has since bought one).
Overall: Another killer board from RRD for exploiting marginal coastal conditions to the
max. The fast-tail rocker ensures that you will get planing with as small a sail as possible as
soon as the wind allows, while the unusually pivotal and manoeuvrable feel gives excellent
riding potential. Great jumping and good freestyle complete the mix. Compared to last year’s
board it feels a bit bigger and slappier; a higher weight carrier and better for freestyle, but a
fraction down on control.
It is quite a windstrength-specific design, though. Rather than a do-it-all strong wind allrounder,
it’s definitely a board to maximise coastal sailing fun in lighter winds and be used in
partnership with a proper waveboard to take care of the more solid conditions.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Coastal Fast-Tail All-Rounder
robertoriccidesigns.com
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