February 10, 2012, 12:41:20 AMLatest Member: JEThro


Author Topic: Cavitation plate question..  (Read 806 times)

SuperDuty

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Cavitation plate question..
« on: February 08, 2010, 07:30:45 PM »
Im sure its a stupid question.. but.. Why do some jet boats have cavi plates and others dont? Other than hull makers.. Is there a big performance difference?
If she wants to ride shell get in no matter what she has to sit on!!  :beer:


Brad @ SCJB

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Re: Cavitation plate question..
« Reply #1 on: February 08, 2010, 07:36:28 PM »
Im sure its a stupid question.. but.. Why do some jet boats have cavi plates and others dont? Other than hull makers.. Is there a big performance difference?

the static ones (they dont move) just help the boat ride better....

ones that move via pedal/handle are to help change the boats attitude, much like a diverter.

when used in circle boat applications....they are used to force the nose of the boat down to make it track through the turns better.

there might be a million different ways to describe the above, but thats my 2 cents.
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GT Jets

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Re: Cavitation plate question..
« Reply #2 on: February 08, 2010, 09:22:21 PM »
Cav plates can completely change the attitude of the hull like B-Rad says, on the river boat we used them a lot like brakes, you dig into some down pedal to suck the hull down in the water both slowing it down and keeping the hull from taking flight when you hit a roller, it also allows you to stay in the throttle to improve steering while under a hard maneuver.

I would put plates on everything I own if I could.

Now something like Bennetts on the other hand have even more versatility, they can adjust individually and adjust out the attitude of the ride and correct a listing problem because your big ass cousin can't seem to stop eating all the damn BBQ. ::)

GT  ;D

SuperDuty

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Re: Cavitation plate question..
« Reply #3 on: February 08, 2010, 09:37:19 PM »
So the jets that have no plate at all are gonna be squirrely at high speeds?
If she wants to ride shell get in no matter what she has to sit on!!  :beer:


GT Jets

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Re: Cavitation plate question..
« Reply #4 on: February 08, 2010, 09:53:37 PM »
So the jets that have no plate at all are gonna be squirrely at high speeds?

Not necessarily.....This question sounds loaded to me   :sly:

They technically have a "drag effect" most of the time, the hull will normally have rocker (corrected at 10:02PM) or some other feature making them squirrely to start with, if that makes sense...The plates are to "mellow" their effects....

My dads Crusader and my Carrera both have Bennetts on them.....The little boats have ride plates  :thumbup:

GT
« Last Edit: February 08, 2010, 10:02:47 PM by GT Jets »

wizard612

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Re: Cavitation plate question..
« Reply #5 on: February 19, 2010, 10:52:24 AM »
My dad's Skipjack had Bennetts and what you say is true but his were realy slow and needed all sorts of hydrolic and electrical requirements. I prefer something like a Finish Line foot peddle arrangement for a river boat or CJ race boat.

 


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