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Within the Yater Spoon lies what was a transformative shift from the traditional D-fin into a new realm…of fins that turn.
It keeps the large area and pronounced rake that make the fin great for noseriding, but the cut-away trailing edge frees up the tail so the board still turns instead of tracking dead straight like a true D-fin — a noseriding fin with more maneuverability than its silhouette suggests.
The iconic pick for trim, glide, and tip time on a classic log or traditional noserider — a noserider that won't fight you when you want to turn, with maximum nose authority and just enough release. If you want more drive off the bottom, go Wayne Rich Harmonic '67; for a smaller, tighter-pivoting traditional template, the Yater Pivot.
The Yater Spoon is a single fin designed by Renny Yater in the mid-1960s and made by True Ames in solid fiberglass, stocked in 9.75". The template starts from a traditional D-fin with large area and pronounced rake, with a substantial amount of material removed from the trailing edge. It is intended for classic logs and traditional noseriders.
Leans on rake for more drive off the bottom, where the Spoon is more about planted hold with just enough release.
In the same upright, traditional family but smaller and tighter-pivoting, where the Spoon carries more area for stronger nose authority.
