Tony Crimmins has done himself proud with his efforts on this board. I saw it getting glassed and it is a great shape and has a beautiful foil. Mate nice one.
Tony is living proof you don't need a lot of tools or space to build a nice board. He quietly works away on his projects and puts a lot of time and effort into them but the results speak for themselves. Some would say too nice to ride , but it will get wet over Christmas for sure.
Showing posts with label Tony Crimmins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tony Crimmins. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Tony's new pintail underway
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Tony's next board
Thursday, January 13, 2011
New board coming to life
Peter Mo applying the gloss coat to Tony Crimmins latest board. That sure makes the colour pop in the timber. Great looking board Tony. He will be glad he got it finished before Christmas as Tony is flat out in Brisbane with the floods in his roll of police logistics. He has plenty of long days ahead of him.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Tony's board finished and road tested.



Ride report - " Surfed for about 2 hours off the shops at Lennox in 1 - 2ft clean beachbreaks. didn't leak (very important), paddles pretty well, good volume, caught heaps of waves, took a while to get used the nose riding rocker, not as loose as I expected after riding the pintail yesterday however moving the fin up may fix that, trims nice and gets good momentum. Suspect that it will be at home in small point waves, would like it to be a bit more agile so will keep playing with fins until I get it feeling like I can change direction when I want. 10" greenough fin looks at home"
www.tonycrimminstimbersurfboards.blogspot.com
Sunday, May 9, 2010
All tidied up and ready to shape the rails
Sunday, March 7, 2010
Tony Crimmins with a new board under way
Tony started with setting out the outline on his work bench and then setting up the 8mm ( laminated 2 x 4mm) Paulownia stringer. You can see he has used metal brackets to set the stringer up nice and true.
Pretty solid stringer, a great starting point. You only get a good result by making sure you have a good starting point with stringer and frames all nice and true and that they all fit together well.
All Paulownia skins glued up and excess trimmed off.
He has glassed the under side of the deck and the bottomCheck out Tony's other projects and progress on his blog :
www.tonycrimminstimbersurfboards.blogspot.com
Monday, November 30, 2009
Tony Crimmins and his modified Jensen model.
Tony Crimmins attended the Paul Jensen course at the Eco Village Currumbin in August and this is where he started this board. He decided that he would modify the standard 7ft 3" and make it into a pin tail. And instead of the laminated cork and bending ply rails go with laminated Paulownia and a Cedar pin line.As you can see he has a great eye for detail and has done a great job. 4mm Paulownia and Cedar planking over a ply frame. His sister at Lennox Heads has put her hand up for it. Nice touch.

Sunday, July 19, 2009
She's finished...




Tony Crimmins just picked up his latest board from glasser Peter Mo. Pretty nice job. 10ft board and she came in at 11.2 kg. It is a ply frame with 6mm Paulownia skins and 6 + 6 on the deck and 6 on the bottom. As Tony said ... "She should be just the ticket for gliding across a few little sliders at Currumbin."
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Ready for glassing
Monday, May 4, 2009
Tony Crimmins new project progress report


Tony is building a Paulownia skinned longboard using Paul Jensen's building method. He has angled the nose to allow for a nose block detail. And as you can see from his and other home builders , they become very resourceful with things like shaping stands and work spaces. You don't need a lot of gear and special tools. Just be challenged by the whole project and quietly chip away at it.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Tony Crimmins new project


Here are a couple of shots of his latest project which is slowly coming to life. " Basically it’s a 9’6” x 23” old school single fin longboard. Paulownia and ply frame with some nice paulownias planks for the bottom and deck. I worked pretty hard on the templates with this one – the thicker stringer allowed me to foil the nose and tail down quite fine. I am keen to see just what the foil looks like when I get the deck on. Got the timber from John Whitewood at Tyalgum just over the border – it’s great to work with."
Sure looks like a nice shape and should be a real trim machine. Thanks for the pics and keep us posted.
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