Have the Honda twin forty's and for eight years have used just the bennett trim tabs with very satisfactory results, except on the Alaska cruises with our extreme weight. Then even with the trim tabs fully extended & shifting to the sleeping area much of the stuff during the day felt would improve performance, milage, & ride if the bow could be lowered, so decided to install Permatrims before going to Yellowstone this year. Won't know until next years Southeast Alaska cruise how well the combination works under extreme boat loading, but am overall pleased with them now. With full fuel & water tanks & the boat medium heavy with gear found best performance to be to have the Permatrims aligned with bottom of the transom & 40 percent on the Bennent tabs at 15 mph. Of course at higher or lower speeds the optimum percentage of trim would change, but what remained constant was performance was always best if the Permatrims remained aligned with the transom & trim made with the Bennets. When I wanted the bow down more going into the chop could really then force the bow down much better then ever before using both the Permatrims & Bennent tabs making for the smoothest ride into heavy chop we've experienced yet. The ability to have more combinations of trim & just plain more trim available is definitely a plus. They also solved the problem with prop ventilation I have had at times when trimming into chop or with moderate to heavy load. Would under these conditions in the past have to trim the motors way down along with the the trim tabs even further reducing performance efficiency to stop the ventilation.
Now the negative. The Permatrims reduced my WOT rpm just enough (from 5100 to 4900) that prop changes had to be made to run at the 8000 feet elevation of Yellowstone Lake. Ended up with new stainless 11 7/8 X 10 pitch that max out now at 5450 rpm (Honda 40 likes 5000 to 6000) at 21 mph.
Jay