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FRP said..
If you were to do a side by side comparison of your Quoba fins vs Cdrive how would they compare?
C-Drive:
- provide tons of hold at low speed. They are thus very useful when learning to rider short boards, it helps a lot managing the row while paddling, and especially on takeoffs
- on weak slow waves, you can push hard on your legs, they will hold
- shed off extra pressure at high speed with their narrow tips, so you keep a nimble board in fast or hollow or powerful waves, but in a secure ways (lots of tow in big wave riders love them)
- they are not faster than normal fins
- higher level riders than me (Patrice Gueneole for instance) did not like them because they felt some kind of dual personality in radical turns (hold / no hold) that bothered them
- high quality traditional construction (many layers of fibers), but quite stiff
Quobba:
- not a lot of hold at low speed. In slow waves, you need to build speed and use the rail before appyling leg pressure in turns. They can be a bit technical in this sense
- when pushing hard in turns, they flex just the right amount to keep a laminar flow and keep the hold. This results in incredible squirt and acceleration out of turns
- the drag that builds up at speed on normal fins, that acts like a speed limiter is very reduced with the Quobba. The max speed of your board is raised significantly, especially impressive while racing fast sections or generating speed
- the construction is light and tough, with the perfect amount of flex, and the foil profile quality puts to shame most other fins (notably the FCSII line of fins)
I would still recommend the C-drives for people struggling with the row on short boards, or with clumsy movement that tend to make fins spin out. But for me, The C-Drive advantages were not enough to offset having to use screws again on my FCSII boxes, whereas I have been so addicted to the liveliness and speed of the quobba that I was ready to overcome this hurdle. Now all my boards have Quobba fins, even the one for small slow waves where I thought I would still use big twin fins.