OK, I thought some of you who posted responses to my questions might appreciate the outcome of my Control-Experiment pair of sea trials. Note that in addition to posting my questions, I had also called the Smart Tab factory before taking the boat out to verify that these things were the right fit and location for the boat.
Trip #1 (Maiden Voyage): Took the boat down to Whittier two weekends ago, got it in the water by afternoon, and opened it up out on the water on a fairly calm sea - small chop, modest wind, etc. Well before getting up on step, the boat would heel hard to one side, causing me to yank the opposite direction on the wheel. Even with my "correction", the boat would basically drive at a list, like a car on two wheels. The entire crew (wife, both dogs, and the 9-month-old Junior Skipper) all appeared quite alarmed. In an especially bold moment, I pushed it up onto step and the feel was terrible - and incurred the wrath of Junior Skipper's mom. :x Not Good!
I went aft to try to observe the motor position at one point, but that didn't work out well - the 1st mate lost control of the wheel and we ran in tight, albeit slow, circles for about 10 painful seconds. Not good, again. We limped back into port with some serious buyers remorse about new C-Dory purchase. I put in a call to another C-Dory owner, who told me that, regrettably, his also pulls a bit under certain conditions. Damn, not what I wanted to hear.
Next day dawned windy and cold, and I flipped the boat around in the slip and examined the hind end. One Smart Tab had a loose nut, allowing it to slide to different positions in it's bracket, while the other was fixed. Not good. I put both of them in the lowest-resistance (bow up) position, and we partnered up with another boat for the day. It was better, but not great. I found a sweet spot in the motor trim, just like Weifings predicted, but it was awfully close to the cavitation point. We could be on step with confidence, but could never get the RPMs over 4000 (WOT was supposed to be 4500-5500). Ran out to Blackstone Bay, though, and had a good day. Still not real happy about the boat.
Trip #2 (Sophomore Success):
I yanked each Smart Tab off the boat by dismantling them at the hinge (so as not to remove the mounting screws from the transom, in case I wanted them back on. That left me with two tiny hinges flapping behind, like vestigial appendages left over from a prior evolutionary phase. Took the boat down to Seward, where we wallowed out into 2 and 3 foot swells before anchoring at Caines Head. Even at 9 knots in lumpy seas, it felt much better than the prior trial.
Seas the next day were flat, so finally we got to open her up. The difference was night and day. The XerxSeas shot straight and true, with no need to cling to the wheel. I could have steered with one finger, both before and after getting on step. The motor went up to 4500 RPM with no problem, but I dared go no higher without incurring the wrath of the still-nervous crew. Perhaps my devilish laughter contributed to their unease. Whatever the case, we were 29 knots with no problem, and hints of more speed ahead.
The Verdict:
The tabs appeared to be in good shape in terms of wear and tear. On the second day, they were also adjusted evenly, and on the most bow-up setting. I believe the problem that day was that they still forced the bow down, causing the nose to dive and the boat to veer haphazardly.
So what's the story here? Were they mounted wrong, do tabs that don't manually adjust not work on a C-Dory, or is it just a mistake to have tabs on that size boat altogether?
In any case, does anyone want to buy a used set of Smart Tabs?
:wink [/b]