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Around 11/22/2004 8:07 PM, Eisboch wrote:
Wayne.B wrote in message ... On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 08:29:29 -0500, Harry Krause wrote: When, exactly, is a boat on plane and how can you tell, precisely, when this happens? ================================== Another definition might involve flow separation at the transom. Most times a boat "on plane" will have little or no transom surface directly touching the water even though the bottom of the transom is still below the water line. I am not sure I'd buy paragraph #2 which relates to flow separation at the transom. Certainly true of a speedy, planning hull, it is also true of some of the boats you described in paragraph #3. I've seen and been on large, heavy, but highly powered boats that certainly are not planning, yet are going fast enough to have none of the transom in the water, other than at the water line. Yeah, my dad's Chris does that, even though we don't usually take her above 8 or 9 knots, and she's definitely not on a plane then. Aside: I can remember when we were breaking in the new Crusader about 12 years ago and we were supposed to run it up to full throttle for a while. Commando was, if not fully up, darn near up on a plane and making well over 15 knots, almost keeping up with the Mukilteo-Clinton ferry. It wasn't a pretty sight since she was really unstable and tended to wallow from side to side; my dad said it was like watching a little old lady hitch up her skirts and try to run. ![]() -- ~/Garth - 1966 Glastron V-142 Skiflite: "Blue-Boat" "There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats." -Kenneth Grahame, The Wind in the Willows |
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