Hello everybody,
first things first, thank you all for this very interesting and educative thread. I've read every post you all have written (i.e. 217 posts!) which took me some hours (english isn't my mother language, but even if...).
To the few saying "hey it's just fins" i'd like to say "just go away and leave this thread alone".
It's like if you were buying a car or some boat and say "hey, it's
just the engine"...
Now having said that, let's go to the interesting stuff... there were a lot of opinions I found interesting or worth commenting but right now I don't remember all of them, so I'll stick with what I do remember.
Actually the first thing I found intersting and funny at the same time was that Blackwood had exactly the same idea with the drawing he made on the split fin. Indeed it was the same day (that is, yesterday) that I thought about the split fin and said to myself "actually, if it worked like a wing, the 'lift' would go perpendicular to the blade of the fin"?!
After reading the whole thread, I have come to the following conclusion but I don't know if I'm right...
(i am not allowed to post this link, copy and replace the XX with tt)
h
xxp://i472.photobucket.com/albums/rr84/marknekk/splitfin.gif
The idea is the following, my guess to why the split fins are easier to kick with, is because of two things
1) Lower resistance because of bernouilli-venturi effect caused by the split fins' blades. That are the two white arrows which together form the "red vector" arrow. So the split fins would actually help or "
assist" your kicking.
2) The propulsion itself comes from the water which is pressed at higher speed through the split by the divers kick. Here's where Newton's third law would come into account and which would explain the actual forward movement of the diver.
3) The lower thrust compared to a paddle fin is explained because of the same water going trough the split.
So maybe making a
wider split fin would move more water trough the split resulting in more thrust. Although then you would have the problem of fins colliding with each other. It would be interesting to see a wide mono-splitfin.
These are only subjective or pseudo-scientifical thoughts!! But I just wanted to share them with all scubaboard members.
In the end my conclusion is the same as everyone elses: the best fin doesn't exist and will never exist, since it depend's on a lot of factors like your kicking style and much more. It's the same reason there is no perfect car, ship or airplane.
But nonetheless it would be really useful to know the basic principles of a fin. It surely isn't an easy thing, as we can see from the formula 1 aerodynamics, where each team is always doing thousands of tests not knowing exactly why some things work while others don't.
Probably I have forgotten to comment a lot of ideas I had, but well, it's enough for the moment.
Thanks for reading. ;-)