I needed more lift when loaded heavy, so I went to add a hydrofoil. Had an SE300 that worked fine on the Yamaha F80 on Da Nag 19, but I just didn't like the way it mounted to the Honda BF90 - the pre-drilled holes in the fin would require me drilling too close to the adjustment skeg for comfort. Picked up another model locally - a WhaleTail XL. Same problem...
I know both of them could be mounted - the C-Lou's have the SE300 on their BF90. Jon's just much more confident in his drilling skills than I am... :?
So...I took a chance on another model - Permatrim. Here's a link to the manufacturer's page, and here's one for the guy that sells them in the US. The BF90 takes the large model ($104).
This hydrofoil is relatively new to the US, but has been used for many years down under with lot's of happy customers. The main difference between it and the others I've seen - it's built like a tank, and fastened more securely than the others - five bolts per side instead of two. The manufacturer claims it's sturdy enough to use as a swim step - I believe them, but I think I'll stick with the one I've got. Oh - and it looks cool... 8)
I installed it last week, and took it out today for the first time with a rather heavy load - four adults, full water, and about 25-30 gallons of fuel. Had plenty of lift, and no strange behaviour in turns. On my CD19, the SE300 had plenty of lift, but never felt quite right in the turns; hard to describe, but it just didn't cut very well. The fin kept the boat a little too level in turns. There are a lot's of differences between the two boats, so I can't say the CD22 would behave the same, but the fin design is definitely different. The SE300 was arched and wide, the Permatrim is flatter and narrow, but longer. They look like they have about the same amount of surface area; there might be a bit more on the Permatrim.
Two pics in the photo album, starting here.
On edit...
Here's how I installed it - the Permatrim came with instructions, but the following worked better for me:
- Lay the Permatrim in place on the cavitation plate, and figure out your bolt spread. On my Honda BF90, it was a nice even and easy 12", so the 5 bolts were 3" apart.
- Take a piece of blue painters tape about 4" longer than your bolt spread, and gently lay it on a smooth surface - glass works great. Roll up the ends so you can remove it later.
- Do the math, and evenly mark one edge of the tape with tick marks for the number of bolts you use.
- Make a couple tick marks on the bottom of your ventialtion/cavitation plate 3/4" in. Using these marks, afix the tape template made earlier so it's 3/4" in, with the front/back bolt tick marks on the tape where you want them on the cavitation plate.
- Take a sharp center punch, and slide it up to the edge of the tape on each tick mark - make the punch.
- Drill all the pilot holes (1/8"). I only drilled the ventilation plate - I didn't clamp the hydrofoil on at this point. Reason being, I didn't have a lot of faith the clamp would hold things perfectly while drilling all 10 holes.
- Clamp and align the hydrofoil. Drill the rear two pilot holes in the hydrofoil using the existing holes in the ventilation plate as guides, then drill the rear two holes with the final bit (1/4") all the way through both the cavitation plate and the Permatrim.
- Bolt up the rear two holes to hold things in place, then finish drilling the remaining holes.
- It's probably a good idea to use some 4200, not only in the holes, but between the Permatrim and cavitation plate.
The above may be overkill, but it gives a perfectly aligned hydrofoil with evenly spaced bolts.
I know both of them could be mounted - the C-Lou's have the SE300 on their BF90. Jon's just much more confident in his drilling skills than I am... :?
So...I took a chance on another model - Permatrim. Here's a link to the manufacturer's page, and here's one for the guy that sells them in the US. The BF90 takes the large model ($104).
This hydrofoil is relatively new to the US, but has been used for many years down under with lot's of happy customers. The main difference between it and the others I've seen - it's built like a tank, and fastened more securely than the others - five bolts per side instead of two. The manufacturer claims it's sturdy enough to use as a swim step - I believe them, but I think I'll stick with the one I've got. Oh - and it looks cool... 8)
I installed it last week, and took it out today for the first time with a rather heavy load - four adults, full water, and about 25-30 gallons of fuel. Had plenty of lift, and no strange behaviour in turns. On my CD19, the SE300 had plenty of lift, but never felt quite right in the turns; hard to describe, but it just didn't cut very well. The fin kept the boat a little too level in turns. There are a lot's of differences between the two boats, so I can't say the CD22 would behave the same, but the fin design is definitely different. The SE300 was arched and wide, the Permatrim is flatter and narrow, but longer. They look like they have about the same amount of surface area; there might be a bit more on the Permatrim.
Two pics in the photo album, starting here.
On edit...
Here's how I installed it - the Permatrim came with instructions, but the following worked better for me:
- Lay the Permatrim in place on the cavitation plate, and figure out your bolt spread. On my Honda BF90, it was a nice even and easy 12", so the 5 bolts were 3" apart.
- Take a piece of blue painters tape about 4" longer than your bolt spread, and gently lay it on a smooth surface - glass works great. Roll up the ends so you can remove it later.
- Do the math, and evenly mark one edge of the tape with tick marks for the number of bolts you use.
- Make a couple tick marks on the bottom of your ventialtion/cavitation plate 3/4" in. Using these marks, afix the tape template made earlier so it's 3/4" in, with the front/back bolt tick marks on the tape where you want them on the cavitation plate.
- Take a sharp center punch, and slide it up to the edge of the tape on each tick mark - make the punch.
- Drill all the pilot holes (1/8"). I only drilled the ventilation plate - I didn't clamp the hydrofoil on at this point. Reason being, I didn't have a lot of faith the clamp would hold things perfectly while drilling all 10 holes.
- Clamp and align the hydrofoil. Drill the rear two pilot holes in the hydrofoil using the existing holes in the ventilation plate as guides, then drill the rear two holes with the final bit (1/4") all the way through both the cavitation plate and the Permatrim.
- Bolt up the rear two holes to hold things in place, then finish drilling the remaining holes.
- It's probably a good idea to use some 4200, not only in the holes, but between the Permatrim and cavitation plate.
The above may be overkill, but it gives a perfectly aligned hydrofoil with evenly spaced bolts.