chriscraft254
Commander
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2011
- Messages
- 2,445
Re: Nauticus Smart Tabs. The who,what,when,where,why,and how......
Nobody is deliberating that point. With smart tabs properly installed you have a bow up attitude when on plane, you can still trim the motor up to gain a few mph after you are on plane. The diagrams that the site shows are not saying that the boat should be completely in the water, it is showing in relation to bow high attitudes while getting on a plane. It is faster to have the bow down and the boat running more level while acheiving a plane speed. Once that plane is acheived, yes, you can trim the motor to gain a little more speed. Faster the boat, the more speed you will probably gain by trimming the motor up.
The boat being put on the right running attitude 'lifting the stern and whole boat out of the water more" will help to gain more speed by trimming the motor. Yes, more boat in the water causes drag. But to much boat out of the water causes instability.
I would set the motor up and the prop first to max out the hulls capability first. Especially on an I/O. With an outbaord I would still want to know the best hieght and starting point before adding tabs. But you are correct, the motor hieght on an outboard may be able to be raised once tabs are installed. I would say this would be limited to a few different style hulls.
Data supports this, why is anyone confused. Weight balance . . . classic. This is an example of why the Nauticus diagram showing the hull flat is wrong. Boats are fastest with the bow up. If you can get the bow higher with the tabs, and you can shift more weight aft with the tabs . . . voila, faster![]()
Nobody is deliberating that point. With smart tabs properly installed you have a bow up attitude when on plane, you can still trim the motor up to gain a few mph after you are on plane. The diagrams that the site shows are not saying that the boat should be completely in the water, it is showing in relation to bow high attitudes while getting on a plane. It is faster to have the bow down and the boat running more level while acheiving a plane speed. Once that plane is acheived, yes, you can trim the motor to gain a little more speed. Faster the boat, the more speed you will probably gain by trimming the motor up.
The boat being put on the right running attitude 'lifting the stern and whole boat out of the water more" will help to gain more speed by trimming the motor. Yes, more boat in the water causes drag. But to much boat out of the water causes instability.
Not so sure about that. I'd set the motor up after the tabs. The tabs allow you to trim higher and possibly mount it higher, this is how they can "allow" for higher top speeds.
I would set the motor up and the prop first to max out the hulls capability first. Especially on an I/O. With an outbaord I would still want to know the best hieght and starting point before adding tabs. But you are correct, the motor hieght on an outboard may be able to be raised once tabs are installed. I would say this would be limited to a few different style hulls.