Re: Poor handling
I am not familiar with that brand of boat, but another thing to check is the stringers. If a stringer or all of the stringers are failing (from dry or wet rot), the hull could be changing shape as you run. If this is occurring, this is very dangerous and the boat needs to be repaired before you run again. <br /><br />Hopefully it is not this. I too have put larger engines than recommended by the capacity tag on several boats (mostly because I already had the engines). All of my boats had good solid hulls and internal structures. In these situations, the common "over powered" symptoms were:<br /><br />1) The boat took longer to plane simply because the engine was too heavy for the back of the boat. The engine mounted fins help in this situation. <br /><br />2) At high speeds, the boat could porpoise and be uncontrollable.<br /><br />3) After going at higher speeds, if the thottle was rapidly pulled back to idle, the boat could get real squirly. <br /><br />4) Depending on the hull design, you could experience some "chine tripping". This was true for the flatter hulls that had sharp chine edges. The boat would normally behave this way, but put a larger engine on it and college student driver and you quickly need to see "what the boat could do".