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#1
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Following on from some of the discussion in this thread :http://forums.deeperblue.net/monofin...ins-hyper.html
I had a comp this weekend and got some dynamic photos. What do you think of this for a fin bend? This is a Hyperfin.
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Freediving Forums Mentor That's where I saw the leprechaun. He told me to burn things. http://freedivingbenny.blogspot.com/ |
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#2
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Yes, besides the V-bend already discussed earlier, the fin seems to be quite overpowered. Well, both effects are likely related, but the fin definitely does not look very efficient. Perhaps it may work better with a slow relaxed kick. Perhaps you need to stop eating all those steroids! Or does all the power come from beer?
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#3
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Lately i've changed fuel sources from beer to cider-powered
I do a kick-kick glide style, with the last kick being a bit harder with a bit more knee bend. This style has brought great results in the past but with the Hyperfin everything feels like hard work. I'm thinking of going back to a slow constant kick and keep my speed up, though i'll probably try a few different ways to accommodate it.
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Freediving Forums Mentor That's where I saw the leprechaun. He told me to burn things. http://freedivingbenny.blogspot.com/ |
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#4
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If you can, borrow a stiffer or shorter fin, try with it, to see if it makes any difference. You could also try provisorily reinforcing the blade with some flexible material to see if it helps. Shortening the blade might help too, but that would be irreversible, so probably not something you are willing to experiment with.
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#5
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Any chance of getting a video? From the stills it does indeed look overpowered. But to know why, a video would be helpful. Ie. is the mono too soft or are you just abusing it?
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Simo K |
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#6
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Yes, indeed it does. Almost the entire blade is bent practically perpendicularly to the axis of motion, hence having practically zero propulsive force at that moment. It only propulses when it flexes back, but on my mind that's not the way a monofin should work. I think that for the optimal propulsive efficiency, the working part of the blade should be (possibly most of the time) in the ideal angle of attack, which is (if I am not wrong) 45° when still, and decreasing with increasing speed. That's why fins for sprint are stiffer (achieving so the lower angle for the maximal propulsive efficiency). If you watch videos of monofin swimmers, the blade practically follows the shape of a rather flat sinusoid. I never saw a fin blade bending so much like in the photo above.
Last edited by trux; May 12th, 2008 at 21:05. |
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#7
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Nice photo's Ben! Not discribing the technique and matrial.
In general I think you have overpowerd your fin big time. Don't write of your kick, kick glide style, just adapt it, tune it a bit to fit your fin. You could stretch the time of your kick (kick slower). On the otherhand I like the contious stroke, I think kick and glide is helpfull for those who have muscles that acidate quickly, cannot drain that acid fast enough and need recovery-time. I think it's more efficient to have a very stable speed with as little speedchanges as possible. Appart from efficiency, I much rather see a beautifull contious stroke performes by a flexible person. Love, Courage and Water, Kars
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www.freeapnea.nl -~- Discover yourself in the deep -~- |
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#8
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Looks very much like my fin, when I swim fast with it. Although mine would have much move V-bend at that point. I guess a kick and glide style is always going to result in the fin bending more, as you're almost doing a standing start each kick.
Although the hyperfins have got the v-flex thing going on, I think all the hyper-style fins bend at the footpockets rather than the blades. My leaderfins certainly did and I've seen pics of Glide fins doing the same. However I'm getting one of these to try so will report back, if the shipping company ever manages to locate it... |
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#9
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It seems then that a shorter/stiffer fin would be better suited for the kick and glide style. Not only it would allow for more powerfull kick from the quasi still stand, and avoid both the V-bend and overpowering, but the shorter blade would also reduce the drag in the glide phase. Did you try experimenting with that, Dave?
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#10
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Hi Ben,
I agree with Dave, it's bending much more at the footpocket then the blade itself, I have photo's of my medium stiff leaderfins hyper doing the same thing. The new generation fins are prone to this because the footpockets have a lot of rubber or foam between your foot and the blade. Compare this to the old waterway and your foot was sitting directly on top of the fibreglass blade. The bending at the footpocket is going to be worse as the blade is stiffer it puts more load on the footpocket. I haven't seen photo's of my soft leaderfins hyper pro, but it doesn't feel like it's bending thru the footpocket anywhere near as much as the medium stiff one. The leaderfins hyper and pro also has the foot very far back from the blade, this probably makes the problem worse too. To reduce the problem you would need more reinforcement between the footpocket and blade, and perhaps very thick fibreglass on the footpocket side of the blade. They really need to do it at the time of construction, don't think it's an easy DYI fix once you have a fin. These fins are designed for finswimmers and not freedivers, I think with normal finswimming technique you wouldn't notice the footpocket bending as much. Of the fins I have tried for dynamic the ones that seem to be the most efficient are larger and softer blades. The shorter stiffer fins performed much worse. Cheers, Wal |
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#11
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Well, I've got a Leaderfins Hyper too, in a "soft" stifness, and I didn't ever saw that bend on mine.
I'm not tall (1m73 / 68kg), and I don't use the same kick-style when I swim with my monofin : I use to have a low amplitude in the mouvement (comming from my back) and medium frequency in the kicking (with quite straight legs), and so the speed is a little bit faster. (I have to say that I'm not a good finswimmer, and I don't manage very long DYN, as some of you.) As Trux said, I think that the footpocket bend come from a wrong (?) or too hard kick-style. And the fulcrum seems to be only on the blade, instead of be also on the upper-body (and the arms). .../... Last edited by gingko; May 13th, 2008 at 18:02. |
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#12
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I have a hard blade hyper from leaderfin and a kershkov monofin (hyperfin like).
They don't bend like Ben's monofin. No v-bend and no footpocket bend even with kick&glide style. I totally agree with Trux when he says that a monofin should not bend this way for optimal propulsion. I think it really depends on the design of the fin. For sure, a wide and large blade can only make things worse. What is weird is that the same fin can either show bad bending or not. I know glide fins have the problem but recently a guy from my club bought one and the fin has no bad bending. All hyperfins don't bend the way ben's one does either. I have many videos of freedivers using hyperfins and hyperfins-like monofins (including Pedersen and Stig) and 90% of the fins show no footpocket bending and no v-bending at all. Why ?
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Site apnée francophone Esprit Apnée Last edited by OceanMan; May 13th, 2008 at 17:34. |
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#13
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I'd tell that besides the differences among individual fins (they are unavoidable at the hand manufactured fins), it is (as already mentioned in this thread) especially the kicking style. I think it is not such a problem for swimmers with continuous kick like Peter Pedersen, but a bigger issue for the kick and glide style. If it happens even at a continuous kick, then the fin is apparently either overpowered (and you need a stiffer one), or it has a manufacturing problem.
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#14
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Bending at the footpockets often isn't apparent until you slow down a video. I thought my leaderfins mono was bending pretty well, but it turns out the blade itself hardly flexes and it's all coming from the footpockets. It does this regardless of what type of stroke I use, and is very different from my old waterway MD1:
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#15
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I watched your video in slow motion.
Then I re-watched my own videos in slow motion. It appears you're damn right.
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Site apnée francophone Esprit Apnée |