Re: Overpowering a boat by 10hp
Smokeonthewater summed it up perfectly! One thing I've always wondered, why does iboats have such a hangup about adding 10hp, but yet I bet there are a fair number of those exact same guys with chipped diesel trucks that are maybe close to double what the factory said was safe in that vehicle!
Long story short, the USCG capacity plate for HP is not the word of law in most states. I challenge anybody to show me a state statute (they are all online) saying you can't violate that HP. (I'll leave this one open, there might be a couple out there somewhere.) And from my experience working in insurance for quite a few years, I never once saw a case where HP made any difference at all. (again, I challenge anybody to dig up a case file where overpowering (at least within reason) was the main reason in the argument.)
Until that happens, everything else is made up fallacy and conjecture. 'I heard from a friend who heard from a friend about this guy that was pulled over by a game warden...'
State of Kansas
115-30-5 – Boating; capacity plate and
operation; calculation of person capacity.
(a) A capacity plate, once installed on a
vessel, shall not be removed, defaced,
replaced, or altered.
(b) A vessel shall not be operated with a
motor whose horsepower exceeds the
maximum horsepower of the motor as
specified on the capacity plate or as
computed under K.A.R. 115-30-6.
Federal
“Horsepower capacity”: 33 C.F.R. section
183.53 as in effect on August 1,
1987;