jsnfok said...Darkplague said...jsnfok said...
You want a cheap but awesome board to use then get a small jp real world wave or radical wave, fast fun and super light plus they are pretty cheap if you can find one, I had a 83 liter once for the 35+ days and was absolutely fantastic, sold it due to not being enough super windy days, so now I have a 107 stone surf which does from 5.9-4.2 weather
But what about if where you are sailing has no real waves to speak of?
Would you still suggest a waveboard over a small size fsw in 30-40 b+j no wave conditions?
In that sort of wind a wave board has more rocker which just helps to slow it down when you want to, a fsw is usually faster and not as agile, say for tight back hand smacks on rolling swell, but in 30+ knots I found a freestyle board to be the best, but I'm big and heavy

A waveboard wants to turn.
Thus, in B&J conditions, it will "hunt" left and right all the time and not be anywhere near as comfy a ride as a FSW.
You are right that a FSW does not want to turn on a wave, but B&J is not B&T (turn)

For hi wind blasting with some jumps a true FSW is waaay waaay better than any waveboard. They track straight, jump insanely good due to width and are the easiest gybing boards out there as they maintain more speed than a waveboard, but are not as hard to gybe as a freeride or slalom.
I think the O.P is talking about control and the odd waist hi wave to jump off, so a FSW is the one.