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We proudly present the Power Glide 45, the newest design in our continually evolving Greenough collection.
Volan is a woven fiberglass cloth laid by hand and finished with a resin that cures to a warm amber tint. It flexes differently than solid fiberglass — more spring, more life, more feel through turns. Where solid glass is stiff and direct, volan breathes with the wave.
The hand-laid process means each fin has subtle texture and character. It's heavier, which adds momentum through flat sections. Surfers who ride volan describe it as "warmer" — the fin does more of the work, trimming and holding without demanding constant input.
Shop the Greenough Power Glide 45 Volan ›
The upper section twists — what True Ames calls variable-tow — so the fin generates its own drive through directional twisting rather than leaning on a multi-fin setup, while the added rake opens the turning radius for longer, smoother arcs.
Put it on a performance mid-length, edge board, or speed single when you want twist-fin drive and spring without the Power Blade's demands — it holds its line through bigger arcing turns and is more forgiving for everyday surfing. If you surf hard off the rail and want maximum maneuverability, step up to the Power Blade; if you want one fin for many boards, the Greenough 4A is still the benchmark.
The Power Glide 45 is a True Ames twist fin that evolves the Power Blade template with more rake, more surface area, more flex, and a softer outline. The upper section twists under load, which True Ames calls variable-tow. Construction is heat-treated fiberglass with a high-density epoxy layup. It comes in three sizes, 7.75", 8.25", and 8.75", and is intended for mid-lengths, edge boards, and speed-oriented single fins.
The Power Glide is the friendlier evolution of the Power Blade, holding its line through bigger arcs where the Blade demands active, off-the-rail surfing.
The review calls the 4A the more universal, plant-and-trim option, while the Power Glide adds twist-fin acceleration and livelier release.
For a heavy noseriding log, the review says the planted Heritage still does the tail-down job better.
