If you can't back kick, you've lost half of the ability to do a helicopter turn.
I suppose that would be a tragedy if you're a helicopter.
---------- Post added April 2nd, 2015 at 12:40 PM ----------
Can no one see the benefits of being able to swim forward significantly better? Have you ever wished that it wasn't so damn hard to dive in a current? If nothing else, moving like a nekton is a lot more fun than spinning in circles and going backward. Diving is supposed to be fun! Why do you dive, if not for fun?
Anything that increases the fun factor should be seriously considered.
---------- Post added April 2nd, 2015 at 05:49 PM ----------
Although this thread was started by talking about a new kind of diving fin, it is really about a new kind of diving.
I think it is important to talk about the fun in diving. The diving industry is shrinking and the average age of divers goes up each year. Young people are not getting into scuba diving, and a big reason for this attrition of young divers is simply that the activity is not fun anymore. Everyone has seen the underwater world on their big screen high-def TV, and there's no point to strapping yourself into 100 pounds of restrictive equipment and sitting static and cold underwater to see a less impressive representation of the same thing. If they cannot dynamically interact with the underwater environment in a fun and exciting way, it's not better than watching the videos and there's just no point to doing it.
The monofin is about making scuba diving fun and interactive. People want to connect with the water and nature on a dynamic level, not to suit up to look like Rube Goldberg designed a ridiculous swimming contraption.
Take a look at this diver and tell me if this isn't the most awkward looking underwater locomotion you could possibly imagine:
https://youtu.be/LPX0lehxZwc
- [ Honestly, it doesn't look much more graceful going foreward:
https://youtu.be/HnJzOkUH7N4 ]
Now have a look at this impressive video of the helicopter turn:
https://youtu.be/LRCVZTTzm_s
From the comments posted so far, it would appear that this is what current divers (that aging group that is slowly going extinct) think is important to the sport. How is this supposed to look fun or attractive to prospective new divers? Does it look like the divers in those two videos are having more fun than the guy in the video at the head of this thread or these people here?
https://youtu.be/8d4WfMbC5OU
It is the dynamic interaction between the diver and the ocean that makes the sport interesting and worth doing in person. This is what the industry needs to survive and grow again. The old ways just aren't good enough anymore.
At least that's how I feel about it.
- Video at the head of the thread repeated here for convenience:
https://youtu.be/Kr4vUrCWuXg