I have a selection of 3 freeride fins that cover the range of wind strengths that I ususally sail in. I'm pretty happy with the fins except that as my speed has increased I am finding that as a relatively light weight sailor (73kg) they generate a bit too much lift (the board rails up as the speed increases).
I've considered buying a smaller fin but having noticed that some of the newer fins now have a very square tip I wondered if shortening the end of my existing fins to a square instead of pointed tip would solve my problem (at a substantially reduced cost).
A reduction of about 2-3cm is what I had in mind. Is there a risk of reducing the fins performance (i.e. a greater increase in drage than the reduction in lift).
Terry
PM Elmo he can set you straight on re-boxing fins. Its really easy once you have made a jig. Quite a few of us have been doing it to make decent weedys that go fast![]()
I'm pretty sure the red muppet would be happy to do them for you for a small donation to his windsurfing budget![]()
I think it depends on the fin's angle, a more upright fin is more affected by induced drag, if the tip is too large.
So for an upright fin, you can either do as Bender suggests and rebox it shorter, or cut of the tip, but try and maintain the original taper, and then grind/sand it to recreate the foil. If it's a weedy at 45deg, cutting it off along the water flow, (parallel to the base), may be OK. (one of our guys has done this and still got good speeds.)