Quote from: gran398Exactly. These old flatbacks and twelve degree hulls weren't designed to run 55. The idea was to provide an easy-planning, sweet running hull given the power available at that point in time.The COG was mentioned since it has been discussed and is applicable. I too wish we had definitive numbers. Am sure they existed, but were lost long ago. Carl, you are on the right track with your estimates. Eugene stated there was a formula available, not sure where he obtained it however. Couple of examples of how these boats run with what we consider low HP today. Skoot's 90 HP 19-6 easily ran in the mid twenties with 1000 ponds of men, gear, ice, beer, and food. My 22-2 planes and runs on a single 75 HP outboard.Bottom line, these original designs run fine with moderate HP <!-- s:thumright: --><!-- s:thumright: -->What were your numbers running on one engine? RPM/speed? What was the load? I know what mine ran precisely with (1) 115 so I would like to compare.
Exactly. These old flatbacks and twelve degree hulls weren't designed to run 55. The idea was to provide an easy-planning, sweet running hull given the power available at that point in time.The COG was mentioned since it has been discussed and is applicable. I too wish we had definitive numbers. Am sure they existed, but were lost long ago. Carl, you are on the right track with your estimates. Eugene stated there was a formula available, not sure where he obtained it however. Couple of examples of how these boats run with what we consider low HP today. Skoot's 90 HP 19-6 easily ran in the mid twenties with 1000 ponds of men, gear, ice, beer, and food. My 22-2 planes and runs on a single 75 HP outboard.Bottom line, these original designs run fine with moderate HP <!-- s:thumright: --><!-- s:thumright: -->
I was power shopping for the 22-2 (12°) this weekend, and decided to ask some commercial fishing buddies what they are running. A substantial portion of the local dory fleet is running 90HP E-tecs on 22' boats very comparable in weight but with flat bottoms. When I told them I was looking at something in the 150 class (as it seems a lot of guys here are running) the majority of the responses were simply "why?". The conditions here on the west coast are rarely good enough to run at the kind of speeds a 150 would get me, and the weight and fuel savings are considerable. These guys have me thinking now that an E-Tec 90 or 115 might get me where I need to be. Is this a bad, or worse yet unsafe idea? I will not running with a tower or livewell or any wildly heavy items. The Evinrude dealers are running a 10 year warranty promo until April 1st, so I have a little time to figure it all out. Any insight here would be very appreciated.
That is why I love this forum. Thank you for the detailed response. The time you spent typing that wasn't lost on me. I very much appreciate it.