any curling of the rays and ventral fins. In a very easy case, it will cause only a deduction of points, but in a worse case it will cause the disqualification of the fish. This ray weakness is to be eliminated by selection.
There the following variants of the caudal fin-Singleray:
The rays should not exceed 30% of the total fins. The part of the basis fin should be 70% of the total fin.
Doubleray:
Here it is desired that the rays are grown together in pairs when they come out of the closed basis part of the fins. The partitioning should be 70% Basiscaudale, 15% to the grown together pairs of rays and 15% to the ending rays (single rays, not grown together).
fourrayIn this case 4 rays are grown together coming out of the Basiscaudale, whereby the proportional partitioning is the same as with doubleray.
- Crossray
A crossover of the free standing final rays is desired either within a grown together pair or with the corresponding rays of 2 neighbouring pairs of rays, which are lying next to each other. In order to keep a harmonious general view for these over crossing, the partitioning changes here; in 75% Basiscaudale, 15% grown together groups of rays and 10% final rays.
Variant Balloon:
It apply to the same rules as CT, with the only difference that there is more fin tissue between the rays present, which is not taut, but blowing like a balloon.
The females are to be evaluated after the same guidelines as the males, however with proportionally shorter fins.
Standard Veiltail (VT)
Dorsal (dorsal fin) )
The Dorsal is narrower in its basis and has not as many rays as the other fin variants. The fin should run in a sickle-shaped manner and not exceed over ¾ of the body length of the fish. It should not run out in individual rays. Overlapping of the Dorsal over the fish body is not desired.
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