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Rightarmbad wrote: Only if you are doing marathon paddles, like more than 40km or so, should you go to a smaller blade, and only then after considering all facets of the paddle you are undertaking.
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Rightarmbad wrote: The blade goes sideways, the lift force is produced at 90 degrees to the drag force.
Standard wing theory.
Rightarmbad wrote: If I use an Epic midwing, when I try and up the pace, it shudders as it comes out of lift mode and into drag mode.
A large midwing, doesn't do this, doesn't matter how hard I try, it will always stay in lift mode.
Rightarmbad wrote: As regards to the catch, my experience is that blade shape has more effect than blade size.
Rightarmbad wrote: What's your reasoning behind a smaller paddle for ocean conditions and larger for flat?
Rightarmbad wrote: When would you choose the larger blade for the Gibbons?
I assume that it has a high seat position that you use a longer paddle on it.
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Rightarmbad wrote: Even with a flat blade, nobody just pulls straight back.
The flat blades were used in a curvilinear arc that allowed a lift dominated action.
This leaves the blade slightly angled, and therefore the resultant force did not point straight ahead, but a little to the side.
A wing improves on this by allowing the blade to move a straight sideways path with the blade always angled directly to the desired direction of motion.
And there is the magical 6 to 7 percent benefit of a wing.
It is fully lift dominated with the resultant force all pointed forward.
A flat blade paddled well, can go a long way close to this, but in the end, it always has to be tilted a bit in it's action to create lift, so the resultant force can never truly point the right direction.
The goal of stroke mechanics is get these forces pointing the right way, while at the same time tapping into the bodies ability in the best compromise.
We still suffer a bit of poor force direction, especially when paddlers push forward with their top hand, which points the resultant forces to the bottom and we apply a downward force to the boat.
Hence the importance of the forward stroke, once the paddle gets too far backward, even though you may feel like you have a good lock on the water, a large part of that force is simply not making you go forward, but up and down, because as the blade passes the hip, it must point down progressively more and more.
The power you apply there is better put into the front part of the next stroke, so get the bloody thing out of the water.
A top hand allowed to come back toward your face, not pushing forward, and the stroke ending at the hip keeps the forces in the right direction as best as possible as we can manage.
It also just happens that this type of action, the paddle going out sideways whilst our body rotates, allows us to tap into our bigger muscle groups.
So basic stroke mechanics is; keep the back of the blade pointing forwards, not downwards or sideways.
So go for a paddle and see whether there are parts of your stroke that have the paddle not optimally placed. As in the back side of the blade facing anyways except forward.
There will be many, and even the best have the paddle slightly facing the bottom during the most propulsive part of the stroke.
It's a compromise struck between extracting maximum power from the human body and delivering it to the water.
But for sure, paddling past your hip is a mistake.
As is the pushing forward of the top hand to do anything but start the the next stroke by reaching far forward, so as to get the most out of the forward part of the stroke where the angles are favorable.
I can MAKE an Epic midwing paddle hard, by angling it a little bit, a slightly higher angle of attack, it will not shudder then.
But why would I do that and point my forces anywhere other than forward, when a slightly larger blade doesn't shudder, even though it still has it's forces aligned as best as possible to forward motion?
A wing paddle will be fully lift generating once it has traveled it's own width, that's all a catch needs to be, get the thing in the water, align it as best can be done to get the forces acting forward, then pull with full force as soon as the blade can support the force in lift mode.
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