Roadrunner wrote:
...maybe at 850 miles or 1.122M flexes? ...Except for heavy users with Turbofins and frequent mast benders, I seriously doubt that most owners would see a problem with these "crappy" masts in a lifetime.
Ahh, Roadrunner - you're right, most owners don't use their pedal kayaks frequently. Many people have bicycles but only a small segment of bicycle owners use them frequently for aerobic benefit. An even smaller segment use their bicycles in races. Same with pedal kayaks. Bicyclists have the option to buy better components for their bicycles that will withstand higher use and not rust like the cheap components on cheap bicycles do. If you know where to get better drive unit components for the Hobie, let me know.
If you read a previous post I added to this thread, I estimated a half million strokes to detectable threaded mast rod problems - half the flexes you indicate. I have long legs and take a deep stroke (without bottoming out.) If I kayaked using only the pedal boat, I'd have to buy two pedal drive units a year due to part failures. I'm not using the original drive unit now, but a replacement I've already bought and that is failing already.
Hobie offered the ST Turbo fins to the pubic. It is not my fault that their drive unit is not designed strong enough to hold up to the additional stresses that their ST Turbo fins apply, be it pedaling slowly or when pressure is applied to go faster, or when pressure is applied to maintain a 5+ mph speed for HOURS of sustained aerobic activity.
We're not talking about unusually high pressures applied to the drive unit in a one minute sprint (anerobic) where people max it out to all they are capable of. It is the anerobic folks that put undue stresses on the unit. I'm not a sprinter, rather, a long distance runner.
