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It's a spoof, yanno ...
:homealone:
My world has been shattered. Next you will tell me there is no Easter Bunny or Santa Clause.![]()
I always get a chuckle out of the "speed test" that a certain dive magazine always used to conduct with fins. Like, who purchases a fin because it's the "fastest"? Or more to the point ... why? Skittering around a reef only assures that you're going to miss an awful lot of the stuff you went down there to see ... not to mention limiting your bottom time to maybe half what it would've been if you'd just slow down and look around a bit. So why would someone possibly want the "fastest" fin?
Interesting question. To me those test are an indicator of how efficiently a fin was able to translate work into propulsion. As a new diver, one of my goals is to minimize the amount of work I am doing in the water, and it seems that more efficient fins would serve that purpose. In other words, fins that were "faster" would translate to less kicking and work in the water.
Is there any validity to this idea?
Interesting question. To me those test are an indicator of how efficiently a fin was able to translate work into propulsion. As a new diver, one of my goals is to minimize the amount of work I am doing in the water, and it seems that more efficient fins would serve that purpose. In other words, fins that were "faster" would translate to less kicking and work in the water.
Is there any validity to this idea?
As a new diver, one of my goals is to minimize the amount of work I am doing in the water, and it seems that more efficient fins would serve that purpose. In other words, fins that were "faster" would translate to less kicking and work in the water.
Is there any validity to this idea?
For the new diver ... not really. Working on proper finning technique will produce far better results. Often times, choosing a fin because it allows you to work less hard only inhibits the development of good technique ... because it reduces the feedback mechanism that lets you know when you're doing it properly.
... Bob (Grateful Diver)
halemanō;5836161:In the vast majority of 3-D OW marine environments, where horizontal body position is not mandated by silting concerns, why would the use of something that prefers to be horizontal be considered an advantage?![]()
I shoot a ton of video and an occasional photo when diving, I routinely "break trim" to get the shot but if I'm just trying to move from one place to another or hover over a spot, horizontal is where it's at.halemanō;5836161:<snip>..in the vast majority of 3-D OW marine environments, where horizontal body position is not mandated by silting concerns, why would the use of something that prefers to be horizontal be considered an advantage?