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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Bob Smith wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... Bob Smith wrote: "Josh Assing" wrote in message ... So, a buddy and I were talking -- he said I wasted my money on trim tabs. I said I did not. The conversation revolved around the use of whale tails (foils on the cavitation plate). I said that they could help; but would add stress to the outdrive, and if something that simple really helped, manufactures would make their cavitation plates larger. What's the general opinion on them? Our 19 ft CC with 125hp I/O (no power trim) has a Stingray hydrofoil, and without it, the prop cavitates very easily in a high power turn. A bit lower planing speed and less bow rise with it, but the reason I keep it on is mainly cavitation prevention. I would suspect that the angle of your drive in the turn and prop selection has more to do with the cavitation problem than the plate. Angle is not adjustable, since our outdrive (VP 270) needs to be locked in the "down" position when operating. All three of our props (14x19SS, 14x17 aluminum, 15x15 aluminum) exhibit the same cavitiation upon cornering w/o the fin. I'm not pro-fin or anti-fin, I just know that this one needs to stay on our boat. Interesting. That's the great thing about boats - every single one of them is different in some way. I'm a small boat guy and I get to play and test a lot of small boats - in the 16 to 22 foot range - mostly fishing boats on pre-delivery runups for some local dealers. You can test two identical boats except for color and each of them will handle differently by comparison. Some will turn a little tighter, plane a little faster, higher top end, etc. It's definetly a curiosity. Isn't a good deal of that weight variation in fiberglass hulls? |
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outboard height on a pod & cavitation plate angle | Boat Building |