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The Lunocet is a biomimetic monofin intended to reduce drag and augment human swimming ability underwater. It is modeled after a dolphin's tail, by replicating the geometry, scale, and morphology dynamics[citation needed] of what the manufacturer calls the "lunate tail propulsor," as the shape is similar to a crescent moon. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the manufacturer stopped producing the Lunocet due to supply issues.
Description
editThe Lunocet is a 5.3 lb (2.4 kg) monofin designed/invented by Ted Ciamillo.[1] It is built from aluminum and rubber with a span of 30 inches. It is attached to a diver using road cycling or triathlon shoes screwed to an aluminum plate oriented at a 30-degree angle to the resting plane of the flukes, to compensate for the angle of the ankle when extended.[2]
Features
editThe manufacturer claims an advantage over traditional fins because of its hydrodynamic shape. It has a high aspect ratio and large surface area, which can propel an experienced diver to a maximum speed of eight mph (13 km/h). That later claimed result is exactly the world record for 50 m apnea with traditional monofin.
A spring-loaded mechanism adjusts the angle of attack of the flukes using the water pressure from swimming. The rubber spring can be set on three tension settings from flexible for slow relatively efficient swimming to more rigid for sprinting.[3] A cambered foil can be more efficient than a symmetrical foil, but a rigid cambered foil is efficient for producing lift in just one direction. The Lunocet uses the water pressure to induce camber in the flexible flukes which are symmetric at rest. The camber is dynamic and changes sides with up and down stroke. The flexibility is mostly at the tips and trailing edge.[clarification needed]
Road cycling or triathlon shoes are used to attach the fin to the diver. Power transfer is through the rigid soles into the peduncle (the part which transitions the feet to the flukes).[3] All road cycling and triathlon shoes have a standard bolt-hole pattern which mates with the bolt-hole pattern on the foot deck and can be attached using six stainless steel screws.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Smith, Julian (2 March 2009). "Dolphin-Inspired Man-Made Fin Works Swimmingly". Scientific American.
- ^ "2015 Lunocet Pro |". Archived from the original on 2015-07-02. Retrieved 2015-06-15.
- ^ a b "Lunocet Pro Monofin". UltimateSwimFin.com - Home of the Lunocet Monofin worn by Michael Phelps.