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Just drill them yourself. I've been doing it since the original Gonz "color my friends" deck. Just don't fuck up.
How do you go about it? I was thinking about doing it a while ago; I've got some double drilled 169s and was thinking of just putting them on backwards and using the extra holes as a template.
I’ve done this a couple of times and it’s worked fine for me. I redrilled the nose and tail of a deck using the method you described and am pretty sure I shrunk the wheelbase by around an inch.
Yes, just did it on a board for someone today.
The Indy 6 hole baseplate adds or removes 3/8" which is about the least distance I would drill out as holes too close will weaken the board a lot. Drilling them in to shorten the wheelbase doesn't weaken the deck anywhere near as much as drilling them out but most people who drill out the nose don't do that much to stress the wood, so never break boards anyway.
Most of those factory double drilled boards I have are about half an inch apart, all in the nose, but for some over the years, especially when it felt like the concave was too steep or the holes were drilled too close to the kicks, I have drilled in both using the Indy baseplate bringing them in towards the middle and it worked really well, shortened the wheelbase from 15" to 14 1/4" all up.
@baustin As to the drill bit size, I found one that fit snugly through the baseplate holes and it worked well, but forget what size it is. I just keep it in the redrilling kit I have made up.
Note, I used just the baseplate without the hanger, attached it with deck bolts to the deck in the normal way making sure it was square, drilled gently through the two holes, turned it around and drilled the other two in the same way and then set up the board with the new wheelbase.