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#1
posted to rec.boats.paddle
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You can alter the feather of the blade, but the shaft will still have
the indexing offset. You probably won't like that. The way to do it right is to cut the shaft at the center, sleeve in a 6" carbon fiber or glass tube, and epoxy the whole thing back together at the feather or lack of it you want. You can shorten the shaft at the same time if you want. Can't lengthen it much, though. Steve (PeteCresswell) wrote: Somewhere (this NG?) I read an assertion that a FG paddle blade can be loosened/moved by applying heat to where it's attached to the loom. Jersey Paddler's PaddleSports 2007 is coming up and I want to shop for a dedicated waveski paddle. That means short, one-piece, fat blade, maybe even a flat blade... but probably just your basic whitewater paddle (whatever that is....) But over the past few years, I've become dialed in on no-feather paddles for all my other paddling - forearm tendonitis... Needless-to-say, not that many paddles are zero-feather and I've been getting by with two-piece adjustable paddles. Should I resign myself to changing back to feathered if I get a solid-shaft paddle? Or will I be able to do a one-time adjustment on whatever paddle I buy? |
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#2
posted to rec.boats.paddle
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Steve Cramer wrote:
the shaft will still have the indexing offset. It may have. If the index is only on one hand, there won't be a problem. That would mean, of course, only adjusting the non-indexed blade. Rather than cutting a one-piece that's double indexed, just buy a two piece, adjust to the angle you want and glue it in place. Use of hot glue will allow future adjustments by reheating the joint and loosening it. Of course, if you cut the one-piece or glue a two piece, you lose the advantage of having a one piece in the first place - higher strength to weight. Mike |
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#3
posted to rec.boats.paddle
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Per Steve Cramer:
but the shaft will still have the indexing offset. From context, it sounds like "indexing" is some irregularity built into the loom so that the user can feel the orientation of the blade. If that's true, do most paddles have this feature? I've managed to avoid it in the three paddles I've owned so far - but they've all been two-piece adjustables. When I want them, I make my own indexes with a little braided line and some electrical tape. -- PeteCresswell |
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#4
posted to rec.boats.paddle
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(PeteCresswell) wrote:
Per Steve Cramer: but the shaft will still have the indexing offset. From context, it sounds like "indexing" is some irregularity built into the loom so that the user can feel the orientation of the blade. It might also be referred to as ovaling of the shaft. If that's true, do most paddles have this feature? Just checked the paddles in the garage: 3 WW (1 Werner, 1 Whetstone, 1 Harmony), 5 touring (1 Rough Stuff, 1 Swift, 1 Cricket, 1 Harmony, 1 Whetstone). All are right hand control; all but the Rough Stuff have left hand ovaling. Steve |
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