1TUBERIDER
New member
I took a high school friend and his buddy and my friend a pro camera guy out for some fishing and picture opts yesterday. Weather was a little breezy offshore but not to bad. Friend got sick, so I took him in and then went back out to fish. Bite was slow so we took off for reefs north of town and the light house. Got out there after a trip at 5 7 knots due to conditions and running into swell. Not much current at first for fishing then the wind freshened and our drift increased so we gave up fishing and my photographer friend wanted light house pictures. Motored out to the light house at around 5 knots as wind swell was stacking on ground swell and white caps all over.
It was rough when I pulled up on the light house. Stayed on the down wind side taking pictures and when done started journey home. Powered up and first swell came from behind and the boat started chine walking and wanting to roll to starboard. It was a handful to get straightened out and I did so by backing off power.
At five knots I was getting launched down swells if I did not back off. Swells were easily in the 8 to 10 foot range with white caps. Every time I accelerated to put my bow on the back of a swell I would start chine walking and had to back off. I covered 6 or seven miles in these conditions until conditions improved (near shore) and then I accelerated to normal for me down swell running.
Let me tell you it was quite an adventure and all my crew would say was how great I was at handling the boat. I do have lots of experience running the rough stuff. The little boat came thru but I do not understand why it was chine walking so bad. Motors were trimmed for running, trim tabs were up and boat was pretty balanced. Until this last trip I felt this boat would handle anything but I think I found its limit or mine.
Do you have any rough water experience to share. Was your boat misbehaving?
How did you end up dealing with it either thru speed or adjustment controls.
When I got back to port, wind was out of the south and no swell on south beach. The near shore conditions were completely different and not many knew how rough of a journey we just had. And last nite my friends were still calling me captain. I guess they were happy to be back on terra firma. Out.
It was rough when I pulled up on the light house. Stayed on the down wind side taking pictures and when done started journey home. Powered up and first swell came from behind and the boat started chine walking and wanting to roll to starboard. It was a handful to get straightened out and I did so by backing off power.
At five knots I was getting launched down swells if I did not back off. Swells were easily in the 8 to 10 foot range with white caps. Every time I accelerated to put my bow on the back of a swell I would start chine walking and had to back off. I covered 6 or seven miles in these conditions until conditions improved (near shore) and then I accelerated to normal for me down swell running.
Let me tell you it was quite an adventure and all my crew would say was how great I was at handling the boat. I do have lots of experience running the rough stuff. The little boat came thru but I do not understand why it was chine walking so bad. Motors were trimmed for running, trim tabs were up and boat was pretty balanced. Until this last trip I felt this boat would handle anything but I think I found its limit or mine.
Do you have any rough water experience to share. Was your boat misbehaving?
How did you end up dealing with it either thru speed or adjustment controls.
When I got back to port, wind was out of the south and no swell on south beach. The near shore conditions were completely different and not many knew how rough of a journey we just had. And last nite my friends were still calling me captain. I guess they were happy to be back on terra firma. Out.