- Joined
- May 25, 2006
- Messages
- 2,463
The cross wise rocker is less of a concern than the longitudinal. Across the hull rocker makes a compound Vee angle. This is not that unusual. Most huls do not have the longitudinal rocker. The Seaducer is the exception, they have the rocker by design, but also do not run tabs. My 44" 1.01 powered 'ducer runs a confirmed 67 mph all day without tabs. I need to get it out with other boats to confirm the setup, it might be a little loose right now for heat racing. I just rebuilt the drive line and am not 100% sure of the strut angle. Ironically, a loose setup causes the Seaducer to Seadunk....LOL
Speaking of drive angle, what about the strut alignment on the Youngblood? Did you check that?
I respectfully disagree with Mr. King. I have kept straight bottom hulls on the water: it takes the proper combination of tab and drive line angle to balance the hull at speed. I tended to have move of an issue with torque roll on the larger hulls. It was not uncommon to tip the edge of the RH tab down to counter torque roll. BUt not so much on the 21 hulls, as they don't have as much prop area. I used to do it with split tabs on my Team Shadow hulls. Yours may be a little extreme, I would expect it to be 1/32-1/1/16 " max. The outboard corner of the tab should be out of the water most of the time on the straights. Did you run the straight edge across the tabs? The tab should be about 1/32" above the bottom surface of the hull. It also doesn' hurt to fair the tab into the transom with some spot putty. The most important thing is to have a smooth bottom. See John Finch's comment about trimming a mono with a drop of CA glue on the rear edge of the hull. It doesn't take much.
Speaking of drive angle, what about the strut alignment on the Youngblood? Did you check that?
I respectfully disagree with Mr. King. I have kept straight bottom hulls on the water: it takes the proper combination of tab and drive line angle to balance the hull at speed. I tended to have move of an issue with torque roll on the larger hulls. It was not uncommon to tip the edge of the RH tab down to counter torque roll. BUt not so much on the 21 hulls, as they don't have as much prop area. I used to do it with split tabs on my Team Shadow hulls. Yours may be a little extreme, I would expect it to be 1/32-1/1/16 " max. The outboard corner of the tab should be out of the water most of the time on the straights. Did you run the straight edge across the tabs? The tab should be about 1/32" above the bottom surface of the hull. It also doesn' hurt to fair the tab into the transom with some spot putty. The most important thing is to have a smooth bottom. See John Finch's comment about trimming a mono with a drop of CA glue on the rear edge of the hull. It doesn't take much.
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