Which monofin?

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

Just to avoid misunderstandings: The WaterWay Classic fin nbrpps1 is talking about is the same I was talking about, the Model 1, medium blade. As nbrpps1 pointed out, it's a classic style and a good fin to start with and learn the technique. If you order from their website directly, look for the Model 1 fin.
 
I taught monofin swimming for a while. It is a great activity. I have four monofins, all Finis. While I have been generally satisfied with them, at the pool this evening the heel strap on my Finis Competition model broke. Now I have been diving long enough to know that heel straps break from time to time, but this fin is not that old and it has not gotten that much use. I did contact the manufacturer to see if repairs are possible, but I doubt it from the threads I have found on the subject around the world wide web. So, I may now have a reason to look at other models, especially waterway from whom I purchased some products a few years ago. Any suggestions? Shipping is a bit pricey, but shipping from the lower 48 to Alaska for monofin sized packages is not the deal it once was.
 
The Finis Competitor have a blade made by Bogdan Lyashuk, i.e., WaterWay! So, going with them again might be the way to go for you, since you know already that it is a good fin for you. I order my fins directly from Bogdan (via his website finswimworld.com). It's not cheap, but also no more expensive than ordering the Finis. Ordering directly from the Ukraine turned out real easy. Payment via PayPal and Bogdan ships everything so it gets to you within a week or so. There are other companies (Leader Fins, Binfins, Hyperfins, etc.), of course. I have no experience with them, but I hear that they are producing great fins. Hyperfins apparently are really great fins for competitive finswimming. You might want to check all of those. Good luck!
 
The Finis Competitor have a blade made by Bogdan Lyashuk, i.e., WaterWay! So, going with them again might be the way to go for you, since you know already that it is a good fin for you. I order my fins directly from Bogdan (via his website finswimworld.com). It's not cheap, but also no more expensive than ordering the Finis. Ordering directly from the Ukraine turned out real easy. Payment via PayPal and Bogdan ships everything so it gets to you within a week or so. There are other companies (Leader Fins, Binfins, Hyperfins, etc.), of course. I have no experience with them, but I hear that they are producing great fins. Hyperfins apparently are really great fins for competitive finswimming. You might want to check all of those. Good luck!

i heard from Finis. They can't do repairs and since the fin is beyond warranty they can't replace it fin for fin. They did, however, offer me a replacement at what I consider to be very fair terms, all things considered, and it has been a good fin for me. I have ordered from Waterway (Canada) once before and found their service to be very good. I am looking at bifins from them as well as a monofin. After all, one can never have enough fins.
 
i heard from Finis. They can't do repairs and since the fin is beyond warranty they can't replace it fin for fin. They did, however, offer me a replacement at what I consider to be very fair terms, all things considered, and it has been a good fin for me. I have ordered from Waterway (Canada) once before and found their service to be very good. I am looking at bifins from them as well as a monofin. After all, one can never have enough fins.
Before you throw away that broken fin, try this:

1. Cement the fin heel strap with neoprene cement. Do so by first removing any oils from the rubber with a solvent, then laying down one coat of glue. Let it dry completely.

2. Then put a second layer of cement on the broken heel strap. Let it dry until it is "tacky" to the touch, then using hand pressure put it together and hold it there for a few minutes.

3. Take on old bicycle inner tube (one of the larger diameter ones), and cut it in two and cut a strip out that is about two to three inches long. Now cut that strip lengthwise on one side. Coat the inside of that inner tube with neoprene cement, and coat the whole broken heel strap with neoprene cement. Let it dry an hour. (If the new layer of neoprene cement "undoes" the original repair, simply stick it together.) Now coat the inner tube and the heel strap a second time with the neoprene cement, let dry until tacky.

4. Wrap the inner tube tightly around the heel strap, by laying the inner tube strip over it on both sides to provide support to the original repair. You will end up with the inner tube covering the outside, going over the top, and covering the inside of the strap.

5. Let it dry overnight.

6. Enjoy the fin again. I have done this with an old US Divers Aqualung fin that I broke the heel on. It works pretty well. Here are some photos of the mended heel strap:
IMG_3215.jpg


IMG_3213.jpg


IMG_3218.jpg


In the 1980s most competitive monofins were hand-made in the Eastern Block countries, and were probably better than the mass-produced ones of today. An individual could take the sheets of fiberglass that were being produced in those countries, cut them to size (length and width, with whatever shape desired), and also peel off layers of the fiberglass to make a tapered blade of varying flexibility. That currently is hard to do with commercial varieties.

SeaRat
(ex-Finswimming Director, Underwater Society of America)
 
Last edited:
https://www.shearwater.com/products/teric/

Back
Top Bottom