I'm in!
I love my trim tabs. I even have a cool old style single post controller. I love that too!!
I'll bet I'd love permatrim too, but with my single BF90 they wouldn't help much when my passengers move around or I forget to switch tanks and have one full and one empty.
I'd like to add a permatrim someday, but my trim tabs give me all I really need, and I am accustomed to using them a lot anyway from other boats I run, that they do the trick. I do adjust them fairly constantly though. It kind of makes running the boat a three handed affair. I've tried the auto trim tab controllers and just can't get them to make me happy.
But extra juice to get your bow up or down is a big thing to these CDory boats! If you had permatrim handlng your bow attitude your trim tabs would be able to have more room to level you out. Plus I have to believe that the permatrim along with trim tabs would allow you to get your bow DOWN very easily, however my trim tabs do that very well on their own. They don't do anything to raise the bow though, they just stop pushing it down, and your engine trim largely dictates how much your bow will be trimmed up. I can very clearly see how conditions could make this very very very valuable. The worse things get the more I want my bow UP. Bow DOWN is a comfort thing, but bow UP is a safety thing. Being able to drive the bow UP with more force before cavitation sounds like a very very very nice thing in some spots, especially in overcoming what I feel is the absolute worst sea state for our boats, which is riding big swells with a larger following surface wave/chop. I've felt more comfortable running into breakers than I have coming down the face of a swell on one stern quarter with tight 3' waves also on my opposite sterm quarter. It is very difficult to keep the boat from developing bowsteer in those seas, and while I've never truly broached my C Dory, at those transitional slower speeds between planing and displacement the boat sometimes can't make up it's mind whether it will lean to the inside of a turn (like it does on step) or to the outside of a turn (like it does in displacement), and the boat seems to develop bowsteer at those same speeds more easily. Every time my bow would dig into the back of one of these surface waves the speed would drop, the boat would want to lean to the opposite side of whatever turn we were doing (never straight!) and it sort of made a broaching feedback loop.
The only thing I wanted on these rare occasions is for my bow to get up higher without coming off the slow plane I was doing. If I could have jsut made contact with these surface waves a foot farther aft on my bow it would be with a much flatter portion of the hull and the bowsteer would probably not have developed.
Anyway, I've only run in these conditions twice, and the second time I just turned around and went home (which was way easier to handle). A bit more bow lift and I think it would have performed much better.