After spending many, many years in J I have to agree on the set up comments that have been made. I told every one of my kids (once they learned how to drive, start, mill)…that we will be fast until they are about 105 to 110lbs. After they hit that weight we would have to readjust the setup and we would lose speed. And anyone that knows me, knows that is not an option for me. So I just kept putting lighter drivers in the rig.
We tested for I bet 100 hours just getting on plane and testing setups for J. I have to admit having kids in J in the recent years was grueling because of it. Wind change, water conditions change, kid weighs 10 lbs more than the year before and back to the drawing board.
I can tell you this… for us… dropping the engine down, did not help the getting on plane. It did not considerably slow us down. Lower unit placement to the bottom of the boat is critical and changes with the size of the driver.
I took Del testing with us one weekend a few years back, the year before Michelle started racing and by putting different kids in the boat and where they sat was remarkably different and drastically changed getting on plane. Even after testing for 10 hours that day we were not sure what we had learned but we kept working at it.
In the years of J I could count on one hand the number of times we didn’t get out for a heat but like I said, it was grueling. It’s the worse feeling in the world as you watch your kid struggle to get on plane. Thankfully my kids were on the small size (thank god they take after their mom with that and not their dad) and older and we were able to have them realize that if they were struggling to get on plane that they had to try something different. Back off the throttle a little, lean forward, get further back, right before it blows out try cracking the throttle…
We need to fix this, but let’s make sure whatever we decide it is truly a fix and works.
We tested for I bet 100 hours just getting on plane and testing setups for J. I have to admit having kids in J in the recent years was grueling because of it. Wind change, water conditions change, kid weighs 10 lbs more than the year before and back to the drawing board.
I can tell you this… for us… dropping the engine down, did not help the getting on plane. It did not considerably slow us down. Lower unit placement to the bottom of the boat is critical and changes with the size of the driver.
I took Del testing with us one weekend a few years back, the year before Michelle started racing and by putting different kids in the boat and where they sat was remarkably different and drastically changed getting on plane. Even after testing for 10 hours that day we were not sure what we had learned but we kept working at it.
In the years of J I could count on one hand the number of times we didn’t get out for a heat but like I said, it was grueling. It’s the worse feeling in the world as you watch your kid struggle to get on plane. Thankfully my kids were on the small size (thank god they take after their mom with that and not their dad) and older and we were able to have them realize that if they were struggling to get on plane that they had to try something different. Back off the throttle a little, lean forward, get further back, right before it blows out try cracking the throttle…
We need to fix this, but let’s make sure whatever we decide it is truly a fix and works.
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