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Tom, to answer your first question...my two boats are a
1. a narrow, tunnel-hull, high bowed, 16 ft. flats boat known as an El Pescador http://www.elpescadorboats.com/ & 2. a 16 ft. Carolina Skiff STD, flat bottomed, skiff style www.carolinaskiff.com These two boats are as different as night and day in hull configurations. With regard to "theory on bow lift"....I'm no engineer...(a big understatement)... but all tabs that I am familiar with... Lenco ( electric) Bennet (hydraulic) and SmartTabs (pneumatic) ....all work on the same principle and produce similar, (though differing in degree and amount of control), results. It is my simple impression that TABS ( any tabs) effectively make the boat "longer" by extending the stern hull surface outwards. Most planing style boats have the "bow rise" built-in. Just start any planing-hulled boat forward and the bow will rise and stay up, far too long, until the boat gradually comes back down to "plane". I've owned over twenty boats so far, and never had any of them that would instantly go to "plane" without the ....Up first, level later... process. The use of trim tabs counters this excessive bow rise and brings the boat into plane quicker. Any planing-style hulled boat, moving on plane, is using less fuel than it would while plowing through the waves. It may well be that if you had a non-planing ( displacement style) hull, that the UP/LEVEL movement was minimized. My displacement hulled sailboats did NOT have any UP/LEVEL style startup problem, but I believe that the questioner was speaking about a planing hull. On the other end, when the boat is slowing down...it settles at the heaviest stern-end much too quickly, bringing it back into an in-efficient bow-up position. Tabs ( any tabs ) help to stop the stern from sinking quite as fast, allowing for a longer planing time at a lower speed. I'd believe that this attribute is caused by the "longer hull" extension effect of any tab system. I'm certain I can find chapter & verse on Tab's efficiency and usage in Bennett's and other websites. The engineering studies have been done long ago, and many thousand, perhaps millions, of boats have used tabs for well over 30 years. If you'd like more data, I can Google it for you. I was a skeptic about the effectiveness of tabs, too. Now that I am a user though, I wouldn't boat without them. regards, -- RichG manager, Carolina Skiff Owners Group on MSN http://groups.msn.com/CarolinaSkiffOwners .. "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... Rich's post got me to looking - just for my own edification. This is from the Nauticus web site about Smart Tabs: **** "SPEED REGULATION SMART TABS start in a downward angel to maximize lift at slow speeds. As the boat accelerates, the water pushes up on the trim plates providing lift to the stern which minimizes bow rise, and allows the boat to plane quickly. Once the water pressure exceeds the actuator load rating (maximum lift) the trim plates move up to a horizontal position eliminating any drag." **** Besides the fact that angels are not relevant to this discussion except for praying for good weather, doesn't this seem counter to accepted theory on bow lift? Bow lift is what you need to get up on plane as I understand it. It would seem to me that lifting the stern is exactly what you don't want to do - you want to keep the stern as neutral as possible acting as a pivot point - or am I wrong? On the opposite end of this planing deal, I'm not sure how this allows you to stay on plane longer. Even if you set the actuators to a heavy setting, that kind of defeats the purpose - yes/no? Later, Tom - who is not looking to start an argument, just being curious. |
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