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Fin tips

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Created by choco > 9 months ago, 5 Feb 2011
choco
SA, 4175 posts
5 Feb 2011 10:33AM
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http://www.windsurfermag.com/magazine/pro-slalom-windsurfing-fin-tuning-tips-kurosh-kiani-vector-fins/?params=M3w2Mnww

fullmoon
WA, 314 posts
5 Feb 2011 8:44AM
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Great find choco,answers all your basic fin questions.
AAA ebay rating for that one.

sausage
QLD, 4873 posts
5 Feb 2011 11:46AM
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Fin tips ................................are very sharp

PS Choco - great article

Windsurfunstu
NSW, 177 posts
22 Feb 2011 6:48AM
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Hey guys, good article but I'm hoping for some advice that could narrow it down a little more for me. I've just bought an 06 Starboard Go 155 but the fin that came with it looks like it's had a pretty major repair job so rather than getting caught out i figure I'd get a new (or secondhand) fin or two. Would really appreciate some suggestions if anyone can help

So here is my situation,

Making a windsurfing come back after about 15 year. I've done most of my sailing on lake Illawarra, NSW in the past. I'm 90kg and have bought an 06 Starboard Go 155 and a 7.8 Naish redline. I chose this size kit hoping to be able to get out on the water in moderate conditions and not have to wait purely for the good old black northeasters. But in saying that I'd always prefered to sail overpowered and hang on for grim death rather than go in and change down, so i guess i should take that into account when making fin choices.

So what do you say, any suggestions? size? brand? shape?

wespyyl
WA, 118 posts
22 Feb 2011 8:24AM
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I think people over think fins.

For most beginner - intermediate sailors fins choice isn't going to be that noticeable as long as its around what it should be for the board.

Good technique is more important than having a fin for every sail and board combo you have.

For most people i'd say stay with the stock fin the board came with until you get to a level when you need that extra 2 knots of speed.

Spending time on the water and learning how to do things correctly with the board is far more beneficial than sitting on the beach worrying about fins.

sausage
QLD, 4873 posts
22 Feb 2011 11:13AM
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wespyyl said...

I think people over think fins.

For most beginner - intermediate sailors fins choice isn't going to be that noticeable as long as its around what it should be for the board.

Good technique is more important than having a fin for every sail and board combo you have.

For most people i'd say stay with the stock fin the board came with until you get to a level when you need that extra 2 knots of speed.

Spending time on the water and learning how to do things correctly with the board is far more beneficial than sitting on the beach worrying about fins.



Wes,
Couldn't disagree with you more. Beginners yes you're partly right, but correct fin selection is underestimated by the majority of intermediate sailors which in turn can slow progression and promote bad technique.

Changing from one fin to another can (does) make a huge difference in the way a board & sail performs. Remember the fin is sometimes the only thing in the water and it plays a bigger part than most people realise.

PS - I've never sat on the beach worrying about fins though.

Mark _australia
WA, 23433 posts
22 Feb 2011 1:47PM
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wespyyl said...

I think people over think fins.

For most beginner - intermediate sailors fins choice isn't going to be that noticeable as long as its around what it should be for the board.

Good technique is more important than having a fin for every sail and board combo you have.

For most people i'd say stay with the stock fin the board came with until you get to a level when you need that extra 2 knots of speed.

Spending time on the water and learning how to do things correctly with the board is far more beneficial than sitting on the beach worrying about fins.



Wes I also disagree somewhat.

Yes, a beginner can use a piece of plywood screwed to the board.
However for intermediates the advice varies as Sausage said.
How often do we see intermediates complaining that as soon as they are planing they can't control anything? Perfect setup and perfect technique is no good if the fin is simply too big and the board wants to rail up. Too much fin ona waveboard is easy to hadle as you don't have any excess volume, but for an intermediate with 20 - 50L more than their bodyweight, fin size can exacerbate other problems.

I'd say quite the opposite to yoru post and say not enough people consider fins. See lots of people with 3 boards and only 2-3 fins. They'd sometimes be better off with 2 boards and 4 or 5 fins.

kato
VIC, 3506 posts
22 Feb 2011 5:56PM
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wespyyl said...

I think people over think fins.

For most beginner - intermediate sailors fins choice isn't going to be that noticeable as long as its around what it should be for the board.

Good technique is more important than having a fin for every sail and board combo you have.

For most people i'd say stay with the stock fin the board came with until you get to a level when you need that extra 2 knots of speed.

Spending time on the water and learning how to do things correctly with the board is far more beneficial than sitting on the beach worrying about fins.



Sorry wespyyl go to disagree with you as well The stock fin that comes with a Starboard Go is @#$% ,badly shaped and manufactured and its why most people sell them with the board. Check the fin in the light for all the bumps and dips in the shape. A good fin never has this. Good fins that i have used. C3, Select,MFC. For someone starting out something thickish that will produce early lift, not to much rake and with a soft tip to help in chop.Cost $200 new, 2nd hand $100

7.8m-90kg 48 fin at a guess.
A great fin will make your sailing look twice as good as it feels and be so much easier. A bad fin just makes you look crap

FlickySpinny
WA, 657 posts
22 Feb 2011 3:28PM
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wespyyl said...

I think people over think fins.


Lol... I reckon you're right to a degree. Yes, size and shape do make a dramatic difference, but I reckon as long as you've got those vaguely right you're all good to go - unless of course you're more than a moderate sailor and looking for your fin to do something specific.

Would definitely be trying a new fin size / type / style before buying one... but then I'm allergic to buying fins (haven't bought one that didn't come with a board in ten years) and think that 20cm is a big fin, so I'm in the minority here.

kato
VIC, 3506 posts
22 Feb 2011 7:03PM
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FlickySpinny said...

wespyyl said...

I think people over think fins.


Lol... I reckon you're right to a degree. Yes, size and shape do make a dramatic difference, but I reckon as long as you've got those vaguely right you're all good to go - unless of course you're more than a moderate sailor and looking for your fin to do something specific.

Would definitely be trying a new fin size / type / style before buying one... but then I'm allergic to buying fins (haven't bought one that didn't come with a board in ten years) and think that 20cm is a big fin, so I'm in the minority here.



You don,t use fins Yours are just a lump of glass and fibre shaped with a hacksaw and jambed into an end of the board to make it go slower.

Hows the new sail search going ?

Waiting4wind
NSW, 1871 posts
22 Feb 2011 7:38PM
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I also think that manufacturers tend to compromise on a fin size for the range of the board. They often under fin to increase the range of the board.

I know I've had a couple of boards now that I barely used the stock fin because they were so underpowered. So even as a beginner you'd be missing out on a good part of a boards versatility with a underpowered fin.

KenHo
NSW, 1353 posts
22 Feb 2011 7:55PM
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Yeah, sometimes they get it very wrong.
I bought a nice F2 a few years ago, that had a too small stock fin that just did not work for me.
After fitting a much bigger fin, that board just came to life.
An intermediate that stuck with that fin would have missed out on a lot of fun.


Waiting4wind said...

I also think that manufacturers tend to compromise on a fin size for the range of the board. They often under fin to increase the range of the board.

I know I've had a couple of boards now that I barely used the stock fin because they were so underpowered. So even as a beginner you'd be missing out on a good part of a boards versatility with a underpowered fin.


Mark _australia
WA, 23433 posts
22 Feb 2011 5:58PM
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Waiting4wind said...

I also think that manufacturers tend to compromise on a fin size for the range of the board. They often under fin to increase the range of the board.

I know I've had a couple of boards now that I barely used the stock fin because they were so underpowered. So even as a beginner you'd be missing out on a good part of a boards versatility with a underpowered fin.


Agreed. Particularly on waveboards, they are too small as the pro's can get away with it, and also it loosens the board up so they can claim it is loose.

Lots of the magazines state in their reviews that all the waveboards have fins one size too small

CJW
NSW, 1726 posts
22 Feb 2011 10:12PM
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I agree with wespyyl to a point, i've lost count of the number of people i've seen with say 2 boards and 6+ fins, swapping them all the time and generally faffing about. When you're a beginner or intermediate sailor I think this can become a distraction and 'the wrong fin' is more often that not used as an excuse for poor technique.

That said, it's also totally discipline dependent imo. For example on my freestyle board i'll run pretty much anything as long as it's <20cm, it helps if the chord is pretty wide, obviously since it's so short. That said i've run a wave fin cut down to 15cm in it and it still works fine, a bit slidey but given the technique you use to sail a board with a fin like that it's a non issue.

Likewise all my wave boards have super short fins, the longest fin I have on my single fin board is a 23, once again they aren't the sort of boards you 'sail off the fin' so I go for something that is as loose as possible.

Lastly I think slalom and general freeride etc is a different ballgame as most people don't have the technique required to sail a board with such a short fin, nor would you want to if your bread and butter is blasting back and forth.

wespyyl
WA, 118 posts
23 Feb 2011 9:09AM
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Like flicky spinny i've just joined the Freestyle ranks and so can get planing in about 17 or 18 knots on with a 5.8 and 16cm fin.

But I was more meaning that any intermediate sailor who comes in to the beach and puts a 2 or 3cm different size fin on and then says
"OMG the board is so much easier to control now, that's why I wasn't pointing properly/ couldn't get planing/ whatever"
Is doing it wrong.

Granted a dramatic fin size change like 8 or 10 cm will change the board a lot.

Windsurfunstu
NSW, 177 posts
24 Feb 2011 5:38PM
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Okay thanks guys, i think???

I guess I'll try to pick up a something 46-48 and see what happens



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"Fin tips" started by choco