Does Waxing a boat hull increase speed?

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  • kfxguy
    Fast Electric Addict!
    • Oct 2013
    • 8746

    #16
    Man, you guys are kidding right? Placebo effect? :) Looks like I'm going have to try it. How high up do I need to go? Just the last ride pad? ��
    32" carbon rivercat single 4s 102mph, 27” mini Rivercat 92mph, kbb34 91mph, jessej micro cat(too fast) was

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    • martin
      Fast Electric Addict!
      • Aug 2010
      • 2887

      #17
      Personally on a v hull I scuff all of the underside & on a cat I scuff all the ride pads, so it has the desired effect also at lower speeds where theirs more hull in the water. As already mentioned I think you get a slightly reduced amp draw because of reducing the water tension when scuffed.

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      • kfxguy
        Fast Electric Addict!
        • Oct 2013
        • 8746

        #18
        So......popular consensus says scotchbrite pad or 400 grit?
        32" carbon rivercat single 4s 102mph, 27” mini Rivercat 92mph, kbb34 91mph, jessej micro cat(too fast) was

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        • martin
          Fast Electric Addict!
          • Aug 2010
          • 2887

          #19
          I use 400grit wet & dry sanded with straight longitudinal (front to back ) strokes.

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          • madmikepags
            Fast Electric Addict!
            • Aug 2012
            • 1359

            #20
            This is not a placebo effect, I don't race a boat w/out sanding the bottom, all ride surfaces.
            We call ourselves the "Q"

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            • Fluid
              Fast and Furious
              • Apr 2007
              • 8011

              #21
              The "proof" is in what successful full scale racers do. On fast boats wax is slower, period. I tested a smooth versus sanded bottom at a SAWs race through timing lights (not a flakey GPS) and recorded a real difference. While a SAW rigger literally floats over the water with little sponson/water contact, other hull types do have significant hydrodynamic drag at speed.






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              • T.S.Davis
                Fast Electric Addict!
                • Oct 2009
                • 6220

                #22
                Back in the dark ages, Dick Crowe used to say he used 80 grit to scratch angular lines in the surfaces.........well, I think it was Dick. Dick was the first guy in the states to hit 80 mph.
                Noisy person

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                • flraptor07
                  Fast Electric Addict!
                  • Aug 2013
                  • 2451

                  #23
                  I was helping a guy down here at the Offshore Grand Prix in Sarasota, he was trying to set the Kilo record in B production with a 22' Maxim Stingray (V hull) I built the 355 small block for it. The 600grit wet sanded hull was good for almost 3mph, good enough to set the record for that class @ 81mph that year previous record was 77mph. Needless to say I'm a believer!

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                  • T3Merc
                    Junior Member
                    • Mar 2014
                    • 6

                    #24
                    I run a Quartershot T3 and with a blue print job
                    and 400 wet sanding I gained a solid 1.5 mph.
                    stock 200 merc I run 104.5 for a best.
                    Sanding for sure.!!

                    Dago
                    Attached Files

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                    • keithbradley
                      Fast Electric Addict!
                      • Jul 2010
                      • 3663

                      #25
                      This is news to me...I guess I had it all wrong.

                      So let me get this straight...

                      You guys are saying that the bottom of the boat is supposed to go IN THE WATER???
                      I knew I was missing something...
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                      Seriously, some have tested this and found a difference (for both sides, believe it or not), and some have tested it and found no difference. This applies to both models and full scale boats. I have met plenty of people who claim to gain a mph or two by waxing the bottom, and others who say scuff. I could see both having positive or negative effects and I don't really think there's a rule that will suit every application. Theoretically the smooth bottom boat (not even considering wax here) has more flat surface area on the bottom, while the scuffed bottom has more total surface area. The idea with the scuffed bottom is that air will hopefully get trapped in between the scratches and net a lower total surface area that contacts water. Whether or not this happens is debatable and has been debated here and everywhere else since Moses wore short pants. What is often not discussed is the difference in lift characteristics that may be realized and whether it may be beneficial or detrimental to a given hull, but not to another. If a smooth bottom really does displace more water, it may also increase lift, creating a bit of a paradox in regards to this notion.

                      If you're looking to get the last little bit out of a hull, try it. It's not going to cause a dramatic decrease in speed, that I'm sure of. More importantly though, pay attention to the design and quality of your hull. I've seen boats that have a nasty hook get the "light scuff" treatment, when they would surely benefit to a much greater degree if they were sanded with real sandpaper and a flatboard. I tested one hull last year that picked up 27mph after changing nothing but the bottom...seriously. Obviously that is an extreme case but it's definitely quite common to increase efficiency in a boat just by sharpening a few edges and straightening out some curved bottoms that shouldn't be.
                      www.keithbradleyboats.com

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                      • Fella1340
                        Fast Electric Addict!
                        • May 2013
                        • 1035

                        #26
                        It sounds like if your into high end racing this might be a option. It would be nice to see actual proof of just how much performance it does add in a rc boat application. I can't see it completely transforming the way a boat handles though. I grew up with and around fast boats, most were run for sport and I don't recall anyone taking sand paper or scotch bright to hull. If it was such a boost in performance it would have been picked up years ago by the top speed boat builders and some type of micro ridging would have been designed into the hulls. It was often debated and agreed it had potential but not to the point where it was worth damaging the hull. There's a lot of other ways to tune and setup your boat that will net better results. Come race day I don't believe it's going to make the difference in podium finish. By the way, there's absolutely nothing flakey about a quality gps system. There extremely accurate and the best option out there for 99.9% of us. Running through the traps may prove the boat is capable of obtaining the speeds in back to back runs but it's not a difficult thing to simulate on your own. For myself I like to make sure whatever I am running is able to consistently run a given mph, not just a blip on the screen. Most others are honest about it to. There will always be someone who feels the need to stretch the truth just so he can say his boat is xx fast. Saying gps is flakey is just not true. I really comes down to who is using them.

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                        • Zach
                          Junior Member
                          • Apr 2014
                          • 9

                          #27
                          Interesting subject.......

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                          • TRUCKPULL
                            Fast Electric Addict!
                            • Apr 2007
                            • 2969

                            #28
                            When Racing, it does not matter how fast your boat is in a straight line.
                            What matters is, Getting a good start, Driving the pins, and how many seconds it takes to do the 6 laps.

                            Larry
                            Past NAMBA- P Mono -1 Mile Race Record holder
                            Past NAMBA- P Sport -1 Mile Race Record holder
                            Bump & Grind Racing Props -We Like Em Smooth & Wet

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                            • keithbradley
                              Fast Electric Addict!
                              • Jul 2010
                              • 3663

                              #29
                              Originally posted by Fella1340
                              Running through the traps may prove the boat is capable of obtaining the speeds in back to back runs but it's not a difficult thing to simulate on your own.
                              Really? Running through the traps doesn't even give you a "top speed". It gives you a time that it took you to travel between beams that are 330ft apart, and that time is used to calculate the average speed that a boat would have to travel in a perfectly straight line to cover that distance. Top speed will ALWAYS be higher than trap speed, and sometimes the difference is more extreme than other times.

                              The hard part about running through the traps is not reaching a particular speed. It's accelerating to a desired speed before the first light, maintaining said speed for a long distance in as straight of a line as possible, and in whatever conditions that time on that day have to offer, without crashing the boat... then turning around and doing it again (assuming the equipment doesn't malfunction and it does pick up both of your runs), because if you mess up the back-up pass, you have to do it all over again. Only back-to-back passes going opposite directions count.

                              The idea of comparing a GPS speed to an event trap speed is silly. It's like comparing running 100yds on an empty football field to a 100yd kickoff return in a superbowl game. One of them is a lot harder to do than the other, even if both people can say they ran 100 yds.
                              www.keithbradleyboats.com

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                              • Bduncan
                                Senior Member
                                • Jan 2013
                                • 296

                                #30
                                I have read the pros and cons of waxing compunding hulls and also a mirror finish on the leading edge of a prop verses satin. I don't have the empirical data data to support it, but I have had my best runs with this Cheetah with a mirror bottom finish on the boat and a highly polished leading edge on the prop. No doubt! it would be hard
                                to compare the two given the conditions would unlikely be the same. not saying this is (boat truth) if there is such a thing. but as far as I know this cheetah is the fastest ever on gps. 86.1 on 8s.

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