barthel
Petty Officer 3rd Class
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2012
- Messages
- 94
Hey All,
I need a little help understanding trim.
First, the nuts and bolts. I took out our new (to us) boat for the first time today, it's a '98 Stingray 180RS with the Merc 3.0L and an Alpha One Gen II out drive, and what I assume is the stock prop, a 3 blade 21in. It was just me, my wife, our daughter and a cooler.
My "understanding" of trim was to look at the Trim Gauge and basically start in the middle after I set the outdrive down. I realize that trim is not something you "set and forget", I would imagine it needs adjustment due to water conditions, load, etc. We made our way through the no wake zone and hit the channel. The water wasn't choppy and there was little wind. When I gave it some gas the *** end tried to stand up, SERIOUSLY! I gave it more gas trying to get it up on plane, it just seemed to dig in deeper. I did eventually get it up on plane, but it took a lot of gas and by the time the front started to drop it felt like we were standing up on the back.
Through trial and error I figured out that the way the boat ran best was with the trim all the way down (on the gauge). I seem to remember hearing somewhere that running your boat in either full up or full down was not good. If I moved it off of down at all, it would start to porpoise sometimes wildly. When i trimmed it back down, it settled down and rode very well. When cruising, if I started to trim it up (even a little) I would pick up a few miles per hour and the engine would gain some RPM's, but the front end would start bouncing up and down again.
Am I missing something? Am I not doing it right?
I need a little help understanding trim.
First, the nuts and bolts. I took out our new (to us) boat for the first time today, it's a '98 Stingray 180RS with the Merc 3.0L and an Alpha One Gen II out drive, and what I assume is the stock prop, a 3 blade 21in. It was just me, my wife, our daughter and a cooler.
My "understanding" of trim was to look at the Trim Gauge and basically start in the middle after I set the outdrive down. I realize that trim is not something you "set and forget", I would imagine it needs adjustment due to water conditions, load, etc. We made our way through the no wake zone and hit the channel. The water wasn't choppy and there was little wind. When I gave it some gas the *** end tried to stand up, SERIOUSLY! I gave it more gas trying to get it up on plane, it just seemed to dig in deeper. I did eventually get it up on plane, but it took a lot of gas and by the time the front started to drop it felt like we were standing up on the back.
Through trial and error I figured out that the way the boat ran best was with the trim all the way down (on the gauge). I seem to remember hearing somewhere that running your boat in either full up or full down was not good. If I moved it off of down at all, it would start to porpoise sometimes wildly. When i trimmed it back down, it settled down and rode very well. When cruising, if I started to trim it up (even a little) I would pick up a few miles per hour and the engine would gain some RPM's, but the front end would start bouncing up and down again.
Am I missing something? Am I not doing it right?