I own a set of splits and I love them manly because they are bright yellow and my students and clients can always spot me from the rear. I have never used force fins, nor will I try them until my dive buddy out swims me. I have never had a cramp. I have never had any one out swim me so far. I guess I need to dive with Michael Phelps. I don't seem to tire any faster than my dive buddy. So I see no need to get any other fin since I have to wait for my buddy any way. I dive in heavy surf and current and there are times I need the power that splits can not help, so this is when I use my Dacor Turbos. However, for long surface swims 500meters/yards I fair much better in my splits than my dive buddy who wore his force pros. He stated he could not get a full length kick or only half a kick into the water. He stated that he was fine underwater but was wore out from the surface swim. My dive buddy uses a frog kick with his force fins when underwater. He bought the force fins for use with his dry suit.
I find manuverability in tight places caves wrecks to be decent with splits but not as good as fins tech divers use where they can go in reverse, which is helpfull if you run into a dead end and don't want to stir up the silt.
I think with any equipment it is the operator as much as the equipment that makes the most efficient swimming stroke. I find if I start off with a large kick to start going in one direction then all I have to do to maintain momentum is barely move my ankles. This very streamline postion with my legs extended straight behind me helps me swim long distances with a very low sac rate. There times that I am video taping sea turtles, rays, or sea snakes that I like the speed, fast starting power, and manuverability of the splits.
Oh and they are cheep.
I hope this provides some alternative to the pro force fin.
I find manuverability in tight places caves wrecks to be decent with splits but not as good as fins tech divers use where they can go in reverse, which is helpfull if you run into a dead end and don't want to stir up the silt.
I think with any equipment it is the operator as much as the equipment that makes the most efficient swimming stroke. I find if I start off with a large kick to start going in one direction then all I have to do to maintain momentum is barely move my ankles. This very streamline postion with my legs extended straight behind me helps me swim long distances with a very low sac rate. There times that I am video taping sea turtles, rays, or sea snakes that I like the speed, fast starting power, and manuverability of the splits.
Oh and they are cheep.
I hope this provides some alternative to the pro force fin.