Tim wrote:
On Aug 17, 12:29 pm, wrote:
Yesterday, i was at St. Andrews State PArk near Panama City, FL siting
on the jetty watching boats going in and out between the jetties. The
tide was going out with s little wind opposing it so there was a good
chop in the channel. It was a great venue for watching how boats are
handled in chop.
About 1/4 of the boats were clearly going too fast for conditions and
eventually they would pound too hard and slow down. About 1/4 were
going too slow and were wallowing in the deep chop. What did amaze me
was the number of small boats with transoms cut away so much that if
they slowed down their own wake would swamp them. These boats had
transom tops only inches from the water and seemed to have no business
in such chop.
My Tolman is the first power boat I have ever driven so I have no
other basis for comparison. What degree of pounding is acceptable?
I really dont' know how to answer that, but I was out in stuff like
this with an 18 ft. runabout powered by a merc 140.
I didn't think it was acceptable at all.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JXh-9TzY-No
A relatively calm day at Matanzas Inlet, where I loved to fish...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9YwBNdzQVxw
There's a highway bridge at the mouth of the inlet. Most smart people
ran out under the bridge into the ocean. Being a contrarian, I came to
the inlet the other way, out St. Augustine inlet, and down along the
shore to Matanzas.