Are you sure it is aluminum? Put a magnet to it. Likely painted stainless. Mine is an OEM Yamaha 13x17 K and it is black painted stainless but sure does look like aluminum and what I first thought. GW does not cheap out when putting these together, I promise you that. Could be aluminum though and would change that out to a stainless if I were you. Aluminum will flex and this little boat weighs more than some 20'ers.
What you are describing certainly sounds weird. I have had my boat out in some of the nastiest weather with 6-7' rollers (not on purpose). Was not fun and was crawling but getting on plane without trim tabs or any major porpoising.
If it were my boat, I would review how much weight you have and where it is located. I already mentioned crew but there are some other heavy items to consider. There is a 60 gallon fuel cell in the floor under the console. I rarely fill mine and usually keep 20-30 gallons in there. I keep my 19 gallon water tank in the console about 1/2 full and never fill it either. One 24 series battery in the rear port side compartment and a 27 series on the starboard side. There is an extra 10 pound anchor back there somewhere too. Beyond this, I travel as light as I can only inviting slender super models with no gear on my boat. :lol: OK, so I did say invite but does not mean they ever join me.
Usually a 1-2 guys with some gear. Still, even with 3 in the boat it is fine. Wished I had a 150 when 1 of the heavier friends show up but might be cheaper just not to invite him anymore than to upgrade my outboard.
Another thought could also be a bent prop or prop shaft? Or maybe a spun hub? If it is not spinning in perfect revolution I guess it is possible to attain enough trim to plane out but enough to give you what you are seeing?
Is you motor trimming all the water down? Have you checked your fluid level? If it is lacking fluid, it can affect it's range.
Last thought and really hope this is not the case for you but could you have a wet transom? You would notice this though when the boat is not moving and the scuppers would be taking on water or splashing a lot. That is a thick transom but also means that the plywood can soak up a lot of water. Usually rain water but never the less.
Anyways, good luck and keep us posted. Hope you can figure it out. If you need any pictures or measurements for compassion, please let me know as I would be happy to help out.