Re: Hydrofoils
For a few years I was a huge advocate of the hydro fins...or whatever you want to call them. They work great, but after two broken anti-cavitation plates I've given up on them. Maybe on a different drive that hasn't been broken and repaired twice I'll carefully consider one again. <br /><br />Most importantly, get one with mounting holes as far forward as possible and as far away from the edge of the anti-cav plate (or change original mounting holes if possible. The veterans on this board have heard my caution about this in the past. Remember...the hydro foil transfers all the pressure required to keep your bow down via four bolts onto your cav plate and drive...an enourmous amount of force.<br /><br />My first experience with one, I'll admit, was probably mounted too close to the rear and too close to the edge of the drives plate, it snapped when my 240 lbs brother-in-law stood on it. Good thing it was my favorite brother-in-law. It had worked remarkably well and withstood almost the whole season with a lot of water sport activity and holeshots.<br /><br />The second time I chose a different model that had two independent fins. I attached each fin as far away from the plates edge as posible, with particlar care on the side which had been welded. About half way through the season while accelerating reasonably hard with my boat at near capacity the cav plate broke, and not on the side which had been broken before. Myself and most others on the lake where I'm at are reluctant to use them any more.<br /><br />I very much liked the performance gains and quicker planing, but I'm tired of repairing the cav plate on my drive. Leaving it with a huge chip off the rear causes a large rooster tail spray at cruising speed and a slight pull to one side, no vibration but I only tried it two times.