jims said..
I've always used hourglass bases w/ 2-pin cups, but when I purchased my first foil board last year, it came with a Euro Pin on a mechanical joint, which is critical for attaching the sail in deeper water. I sometimes find myself switching sails between fin and foil, so am thinking I'll standardize on the Euro Pin. I kinda like the hourglass joint on my fin board - a small, narrow 70L board that I'm afraid will flip on it's side w/ a stiffer tendon joint when the sail is lying in the water and I'm trying to waterstart, and I like the shock absorption of the hourglass, as well - but, I can't find anyone who makes an hourglass base with a Euro Pin, and I can't determine why. (I'm guessing maybe there's a risk that the Euro Pin might come unscrewed from the hourglass over time? Though there's the same danger with a cup, right? I guess there might also be an issue w/ trying to allow the joint to rotate, but I assume the pin can rotate in the mast base?)
Anyway, just curious why this is apparently not a thing!
Tendons are a bit stiffer than Boge and more likely to flip the board over in waves/swell, but once you start waterstarting they are ok.
As long as the extension rotates freely on the pin it shouldnt unscrew.
I think all the brands offer Boge/Europin. Chinook, Unifiber, Prolimit, Duotone etc.