
RNF '96 Kingfish
Lost RNF '96 Kingfish Surfboard
We thought about it for years, yet never pulled the trigger.  After all these years as the top selling and most popular âFishâ model in the world, the âlittle discâ is now stretched out (and sleeked up) into our line of Mid-Length Mayhems.  Itâs no secret that many of us who started riding fish in the mid-â90s are now into our â50s, not surfing every day and distracted by lifeâs trials and tribulations. Weâve grown upâŠand now, our favorite board has grown up too.
Containing all the proven design details and DNA as the RNF_96, from which is âspawnedâ, the RNF â96_KINGFISH features:
- Low entry rocker, for paddling through line-ups, ease in catching waves and plenty of glide, to take you where you wanna go, once youâre on one.
- Flattish deck, with full, down/soft rails, for floatation and stability. The flat deck allows us to stay relatively thin with the KINGFISH, keeping the deck-line curvy.
- Even the larger sizes are relatively nimble, flexible and forgiving underfoot.
- Balanced outline, with modest width in the nose and tail, which both measure the same width, on all sizes, retaining plenty of central curve in the outline, for turning.  The tail is still similar width to a shortboard and combined with the shallow swallow, it doesnât feel âtoo fishyâ, allowing real turns.
- Bottom contours are flat up front, blending to a single concave throughout the center, tapering to a double concave Vee, from the front fins, which accelerates to deep Vee, out the swallow tail.
The KINGFISH is designed to be ridden 6â (on average) longer than you would the RNFâ96, although you can easily go shorter on the small sizes and extend longer on the larger sizes.  With this in mind, we continued bending the tail rocker and scooping the deck out, as the boards increase in size, so although the board is longer, it doesnât feel stiff and hard to turn. The nose and tail remain relatively thin and foiled in all sizes.  Like its predecessor, the fin placement on the RNFâ96_KINGFISH remains and 2+1 set-up. Twins up front, with a small trailer, is how itâs built and designed to be ridden. The fin placement has been designed and tested to allow an open sweet spot, where you donât need to be standing on the tail to turn this board.
Youâve grown up. Has your board evolved with you?
Original: $740.00
-65%$740.00
$259.00Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Lost RNF '96 Kingfish Surfboard
We thought about it for years, yet never pulled the trigger.  After all these years as the top selling and most popular âFishâ model in the world, the âlittle discâ is now stretched out (and sleeked up) into our line of Mid-Length Mayhems.  Itâs no secret that many of us who started riding fish in the mid-â90s are now into our â50s, not surfing every day and distracted by lifeâs trials and tribulations. Weâve grown upâŠand now, our favorite board has grown up too.
Containing all the proven design details and DNA as the RNF_96, from which is âspawnedâ, the RNF â96_KINGFISH features:
- Low entry rocker, for paddling through line-ups, ease in catching waves and plenty of glide, to take you where you wanna go, once youâre on one.
- Flattish deck, with full, down/soft rails, for floatation and stability. The flat deck allows us to stay relatively thin with the KINGFISH, keeping the deck-line curvy.
- Even the larger sizes are relatively nimble, flexible and forgiving underfoot.
- Balanced outline, with modest width in the nose and tail, which both measure the same width, on all sizes, retaining plenty of central curve in the outline, for turning.  The tail is still similar width to a shortboard and combined with the shallow swallow, it doesnât feel âtoo fishyâ, allowing real turns.
- Bottom contours are flat up front, blending to a single concave throughout the center, tapering to a double concave Vee, from the front fins, which accelerates to deep Vee, out the swallow tail.
The KINGFISH is designed to be ridden 6â (on average) longer than you would the RNFâ96, although you can easily go shorter on the small sizes and extend longer on the larger sizes.  With this in mind, we continued bending the tail rocker and scooping the deck out, as the boards increase in size, so although the board is longer, it doesnât feel stiff and hard to turn. The nose and tail remain relatively thin and foiled in all sizes.  Like its predecessor, the fin placement on the RNFâ96_KINGFISH remains and 2+1 set-up. Twins up front, with a small trailer, is how itâs built and designed to be ridden. The fin placement has been designed and tested to allow an open sweet spot, where you donât need to be standing on the tail to turn this board.
Youâve grown up. Has your board evolved with you?






















