Yep. In tight chop in 2-3 footers, I always have water on the windshield . I’ve owned 5 boats so trimming is not the issue. I’ve tried bow down and plowing and tabs all the way up with the motor trimmed. Neither gets me satisfactory results. Strangest damn thing
If I remember correctly, I believe you boat in the Barnegat Bay like me. I know the 228 and 226 are different but there must be some similarities...
My 228 is basically dry for the most part except when I misjudge the placement of the trim tabs and motor. My sweet spot on the motor is slightly above 3 or the midpoint. Once my motor is there, I then engage the trim tabs and start bringing the bow down further...
Here is what I noticed...The direction of the wind, current and waves play a part in how dry you are. The Barnegat chop is pretty tight and if going against you the lower the bow the better to minimize bouncing but not as far down as when flat. Going with the waves are a different story and I learned to raise the bow up, otherwise every other wave will get you wet.
When waves are almost perpendicular to your direction, which seems the norm, I learned to keep that side up higher than the other side.
I am still learning the speed but I feel like 27-29 is a little better than 23-25. The lower range makes me feel like I porpoise a bit and/ or bounce more
You probably know all of this already but figured I would share. I am continuously experimenting and not sure if my approach is the best or not...