We apply Monte Carlo Renormalization group to the crumpling transition in
random surface models of fixed connectivity. This transition is notoriously
difficult to treat numerically. We employ here a Fourier accelerated Langevin
algorithm in conjunction with a novel blocking procedure in momentum space
which has proven extremely successful in λϕ4. We perform two
successive renormalizations in lattices with up to 642 sites. We obtain a
result for the critical exponent ν in general agreement with previous
estimates and similar error bars, but with much less computational effort. We
also measure with great accuracy η. As a by-product we are able to
determine the fractal dimension dH of random surfaces at the crumpling
transition.Comment: 35 pages,Latex file, 6 Postscript figures uuencoded,uses psfig.sty 2
misspelled references corrected and one added. Paper unchange