This has been the best thread ever. The beginning was funny as hell with all the doubters. I must say, I really doubted we would see 90. But Howard gets the last laugh to everyone that gave him so much crap. That boat hauls major a$$. I hope he can get to 100 with some prop work. Bravo Howard.
32" hotr 90+mph
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Hey Howard do you know how many amps you are pulling on either boat?
And congrats on making 90!Fleet: 55" Quad inline T600 Cigarette boat, Twin Mean Machine, Twin T600 47" mystery mono, 4082 Surge Crusher, 1717 8s Genesis, 4074 Villain, "mini mono", 52" Bonzi, Prather Funcruiser, 2 DPI 3.5cc tunnels, 5' Styrofoam recover bargeComment
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This has been the best thread ever. The beginning was funny as hell with all the doubters. I must say, I really doubted we would see 90. But Howard gets the last laugh to everyone that gave him so much crap. That boat hauls major a$$. I hope he can get to 100 with some prop work. Bravo Howard.
I like threads like this, because so many people spout off their gospel about what you can and cant do, without any logical info to back it up (usually just because its what they heard). Those people tend to jump ship after the thread continues, because they will be exposed if they stay. There has been a lot of good info in this thread, and it usually turn out that way when someone decides to push limits and does so with some integrity.
This thread started out a little rough because I think alot of us didnt know what to expect when howard seemingly ignored our posts, but in retrospect I think he did at first because he was expecting some negative banter.
When I first came to this site I took lots of crap for saying I GPSed my supervee in the 60's. Now I have put many boats well beyond that, and nobody really cares or questions about an old supervee.
Howard:
Are you finding that you have to trim the boat to steer left at low speeds in order to go straight at heavy throttle?Comment
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Who specificaly are you talking about? I think he was actually given a lot of useful information, and (well respected) people came in rather quickly saying its possible (Jay T, Ryan R, ect.).
I like threads like this, because so many people spout off their gospel about what you can and cant do, without any logical info to back it up (usually just because its what they heard). Those people tend to jump ship after the thread continues, because they will be exposed if they stay. There has been a lot of good info in this thread, and it usually turn out that way when someone decides to push limits and does so with some integrity.
This thread started out a little rough because I think alot of us didnt know what to expect when howard seemingly ignored our posts, but in retrospect I think he did at first because he was expecting some negative banter.
When I first came to this site I took lots of crap for saying I GPSed my supervee in the 60's. Now I have put many boats well beyond that, and nobody really cares or questions about an old supervee.
Howard:
Are you finding that you have to trim the boat to steer left at low speeds in order to go straight at heavy throttle?Comment
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Funny, I set two very long-standing NAMBA SAW records using v940s on my P and Q cat......
Howard's cat would be legal in a NAMBA SAW event, running in T Hydro or T Offshore classes. But getting 90 mph on a GPS and running two back-to-back passes for 330 feet each are two far different things. I'd like to see Howard try it - and succeed!
BTW, for those who discount GPS accuracy, consider this. I usually run a Garmin 101 in my SAW boats through the traps. The GPS speeds are almost always within 1-2 mph or less of the official timed speeds - this at 80-90 mph. What GPS inaccuracy? I believe what I see, not what someone else reads online.
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I think the big difference between a GPS peak speed and speed through the traps is consistency over 330'. The GPS picks up the fastest single speed, not the average over a longer distance (yes I know GPS speed is still distance/time, but much shorter distance intervals).
GPS speeds are very accurate in real time, but unless you can get an average speed over a fixed distance from the GPS unit you'll always get a slight discrepancy between it and time traps.Light travels faster than sound, so people may appear to be bright until you hear them speak.Comment
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I think the big difference between a GPS peak speed and speed through the traps is consistency over 330'. The GPS picks up the fastest single speed, not the average over a longer distance (yes I know GPS speed is still distance/time, but much shorter distance intervals).
GPS speeds are very accurate in real time, but unless you can get an average speed over a fixed distance from the GPS unit you'll always get a slight discrepancy between it and time traps.
Funny we used to get slower readings on the GPS when we ran NiMh we would go faster with out the weight of the GPS.Comment
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I think the big difference between a GPS peak speed and speed through the traps is consistency over 330'. The GPS picks up the fastest single speed, not the average over a longer distance (yes I know GPS speed is still distance/time, but much shorter distance intervals).
GPS speeds are very accurate in real time, but unless you can get an average speed over a fixed distance from the GPS unit you'll always get a slight discrepancy between it and time traps.Later i will show you how i set prop angle, i just need to take some pics.
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Howard, to avoid confusion those are Prather propellers, not Panthers. Don't want someone to search in vain for Panther props. They are currently being supplied to the industry by Hyperformance Products.
The Prathers are very 'similar' to the Octura "X" series props, and Octura was not happy being copied. But they are not actually identical, having different pitch ratios - most around 1.5:1. I use both brands, the 230 and 235 are particularly useful on many 4S race boats. Their stainless construction makes them harder to work but they are less prone to bending in use. Many Octura props need to be hardened to prevent bending in use, especially if they are thinned too much.
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Howard, to avoid confusion those are Prather propellers, not Panthers. Don't want someone to search in vain for Panther props. They are currently being supplied to the industry by Hyperformance Products.
The Prathers are very 'similar' to the Octura "X" series props, and Octura was not happy being copied. But they are not actually identical, having different pitch ratios - most around 1.5:1. I use both brands, the 230 and 235 are particularly useful on many 4S race boats. Their stainless construction makes them harder to work but they are less prone to bending in use. Many Octura props need to be hardened to prevent bending in use, especially if they are thinned too much.
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OK, now how I set prop angle. I put my cat on a flat piece of wood with the prop off (prather). Take a piece of 7/32 tubing 5" 1/2 long and slide up to the dog drive. From the rear sponson i measure 12" 1/2 to the end of the tubing. Now measure between the low part of the tubing and the wood. I like to be between 2.5 mm to 3.0mm. I don't know how other guys perform this setup but this is what works for me.Last edited by Howard Lee; 03-22-2011, 12:05 PM.Comment
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I got that ABC prop and went for a run this morning but no vid, wife was sleeping. When i brought it in i was shocked. I was thinking this gps had a glitch. I don't really like this abc it was to far off balance, maybe i just got a bad prop. I just ordered a 2047 so ill check this 1 out. I want to thank all the guys for helping with finding a prop. Fluid i might get with you on a custom prop later. Thanks!Attached FilesComment
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