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On Sep 10, 11:35*pm, wrote:
On Wed, 10 Sep 2008 20:53:47 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: I saw a boston Whaler down in the keys (Grassy Key campground) that they had cut off most of the bow rise and glassed in a flat deck to use as a fish guts dumping boat. They had a horizontal fin across the front for the same reason. This thing would hook a wave and go under but the fin popped the bow back up. I thought the same idea would work on a pontoon. I know I have been caught out in mine and they do tend to *want to "dive and level off at periscope depth" when the forward deck goes under. The ones with the playpen all the way forward just crash into the sea and drown you. I have seen the sheet metal blown out of the track. Usually what happens is they pitch down so bad the prop comes out of the water and you pop backwards. You can get around it by quartering the sea and ballasting/motoring your boat to hold the fore most pontoon as high as you can get it. It is still going to be a wet ride because when that corner comes up it throws a bucket of water over everyone. You can get back OK if you take it slow and easy, trying to work with the sea, and not fight it too much. Yes, the high wind waves can be troublesome. In those situations, would a tri-toon be better? I imagine they give you a bit more flotation up front but the problem is when the deck goes under it becomes a dive plane.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - That's what I was wondering if the center toon would help eliminate that by giving better fotation to the bow. |
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