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WILDH2PRO wrote:
(ORIGINAL POST AT BOTTOM) ....stuff deleted So, according to that (very credible) source, I've been using the paddle upside down?! I've been paddling with the higher area half of the blade (assuming the ridge where the shaft combines with the blade is the dividing point between the two) facing down, just like my last paddle, a similarly asymetric Werner Freestyle! Granted, the review is for the AT2, not the AT4, but I would have to imagine the designs are similar enough to employ the same paddling style. Any of you AT paddlers out ther care to weigh in on which side of the blade goes down? Haven't paddled for a week, and even so, whatever I'd done to my elbow doesn't seem to be getting any better. No paddling for me for a while, it looks like...waaaaa! ....stuff deleted Most paddles I've seen are to be used with the smallest blade surface down. The reason for this is that you don't need a lot of paddle in the water to propel a boat. I'm still using the original paddles I purchased years ago and I find that I put no more than 1/2 the blade in the water at a time and could easily go to a paddle that uses considerably less blade. Swimmers (world class freestylers), for example, propel themselves at close to 5 MPH using a paddle the size of, oh my, your hand. When training with paddles on their hands, they tend to get tendonitis due to the excess stress. Now a boat is considerably larger, but WW paddlers routinely roll their boat using their hands as well. How much blade is necessary is probably considerably less than what most of us think. I have taken my son's shorter, narrower, blade out and found that I liked the response. I tire less quickly, use less muscle, and have greater turnover (more revolutions per minute). This is consistent with what is observed in similar power sports (such as cycling) where a faster cadence and lower gearing results in a more satisfying and comfortable expenditure of energy, even though it seems less efficient. Cyclists used to recommend an RPM of 60-80, but modern thinking puts a comfortable cadence between 80-100, with 120 seen in some individuals. I prefer a cadence of 90-95 and find that I am working too hard at lower cadences. The end result, however, is the same. It takes X amount of energy to move a particular hull 1 mile. You can do this with a fat, long paddle, or a short, skinny one. The number of calories expended is virtually identical. It comes down to which is more comfortable for the paddler and which leads to a reduction of stresses on the anatomy. Rick |
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