For Divajean and any others interested in Trim Tab application and results.
They are like Microwave Ovens; Once you use them you'll wonder how you ever managed beforehand.
To the new Grady Owner unfamiliar with them, they seem counter-intuitive at first; press the starboard toggle switch, the port tab drops and vice-versa. It clears up when you realize what the tabs do.
To start with the bare-bones analysis, you push the toggle switches, the tabs go down and raise the stern, thereby lowering the bow. Right off the boat, they are ineffective at idle speeds. Retract them when not on plane; they just create drag unless your trolling or need to slow the boat waay down underway.
USES:
1.) Load-Leveling Underway:
Deploying for example, the port tab (via the stbd toggle switch), it will raise the stern on the port side, thereby lowering the bow on the stbd side. Cause And Effect also raises the bow on the port side as the stbd bow lowers. Follow? Put your hand in front of you and tilt it to the right and forward. That's what your boat does when you drop the port tab. Most toggle switches have an LED light display, depicting how far down the tab has been dropped.
This is handy when your partner packs 200 lbs of ice in the port livewell and the boat has a resulting list to port on plane. Hit the stbd toggle, lower the port tab, the stbd bow lowers, the port bow comes up and she flies level.
Any deep V hull will lean into a quartering wind on the bow. Gradys are no exception. Correct the lean with whatever tab is required, depending on whether the wind hits you on the port or stbd quarter using the procedure I outlined above. It will fix it no prob.
They also save relationships:
Scenario: Husband & Wife take a day cruise: She's pissed because she's gained a few and no longer looks good in her outfits. The Grady planes off, she's in the passenger seat in a bad mood, the boat is listing to port because of you-know-what. The Husband unobtrusively lowers the port tab, the boat levels and he tells her "You look great..What do you mean, the boats tilting?? It's your imagination!
Marriage Saved; all because of Trim Tabs....
2.) Improving Ride:
Lucky Dude and I have been discussing this concept. Most Gradys after 1992 have the now-famous SeaV2 variable deadrise hull. It starts with an approx 50 degree deadrise in the bow and gradually flattens as you look aft. In a head or quartering sea of significant height and steepness, Gradys tend to pound and slam. This is solved to a degree with your tabs.
Deploy both tabs and the bow will lower as the tabs raise the stern. The idea is to put the bow down so that Point Of Entry where the water hits the hull is as far forward as possible. You want the sharp entry of the bow to split the waves instead of the waves getting a crack at the flatter surface astern. If the Point Of Entry contacts the hull further aft in the flatter section, you will experience pounding and the helmsman will be especially uncomfortable as it will be slapping the hull directly underneath him or her.
Realize that the boat will not stay perfectly level as you depress both toggles to lower the tabs simultaneously. You will have to adjust one tab then the other to fine-tune the process and keep the boat level as you drop the nose. It will become intuitive after a short time.
As the very wise Doc Stressor has said, it's not an efficient running attitude when you have both tabs deployed. As mentioned, the whole idea is to lower the bow for a smoother ride and the trade-off is putting more hull in contact with the water underway, creating more drag. You get a smoother ride, but less MPG. Life is a trade off....
Engine trim also helps with lowering the bow and smoothing out the ride, but not to the degree the tabs do. I will not go into that concept in detail here otherwise our very cool Moderator, Seafarer 228G will Ban me for hogging the system. In my humble opinion, 2 to maybe 3 bars on your trim gauge is a good running angle for the engine if you plan to utilize the tabs to lower the bow.
I consider this VERY IMPORTANT if not ESSENTIAL to your tab education:
1.) When you first start out to learn them, find a stretch of calm, or relatively calm water like a bay or river where you can run for an extended period on plane. It is much easier to learn how the tabs work when your not fighting a rough sea and the boats pitching.
Many people press the toggles, nothing happens immediately, they keep pushing down, and all of a sudden the boat is leaning like crazy to one side and they get startled. Deploy the tabs in short bursts, then pause and wait for the result. It will be a delayed reaction and you won't be over-correcting constantly.
Take your time! Stay in that bay or river until you are thoroughly familiar with how the tabs effect your boats handling and attitude. As you get to know them, they have the potential to become your New Best Friends.
As Columbo says, "One More Thing." Most newer Gradys have an auto-retract feature that fully retracts the tabs when the ignition is shut off. if your does not, be certain to retract them BEFORE you have your Grady fork-lifted out of the water. If the forks happen to contact the tabs when the driver lifts the boat up, the resulting weight on the tabs could damage them. Same procedure when cranking the Grady onto a trailer; make sure the tabs are fully retracted.
Thanks for reading; I was hoping to make this shorter, but I can't seem to, and it's so hard to change Late In Life.....
They are like Microwave Ovens; Once you use them you'll wonder how you ever managed beforehand.
To the new Grady Owner unfamiliar with them, they seem counter-intuitive at first; press the starboard toggle switch, the port tab drops and vice-versa. It clears up when you realize what the tabs do.
To start with the bare-bones analysis, you push the toggle switches, the tabs go down and raise the stern, thereby lowering the bow. Right off the boat, they are ineffective at idle speeds. Retract them when not on plane; they just create drag unless your trolling or need to slow the boat waay down underway.
USES:
1.) Load-Leveling Underway:
Deploying for example, the port tab (via the stbd toggle switch), it will raise the stern on the port side, thereby lowering the bow on the stbd side. Cause And Effect also raises the bow on the port side as the stbd bow lowers. Follow? Put your hand in front of you and tilt it to the right and forward. That's what your boat does when you drop the port tab. Most toggle switches have an LED light display, depicting how far down the tab has been dropped.
This is handy when your partner packs 200 lbs of ice in the port livewell and the boat has a resulting list to port on plane. Hit the stbd toggle, lower the port tab, the stbd bow lowers, the port bow comes up and she flies level.
Any deep V hull will lean into a quartering wind on the bow. Gradys are no exception. Correct the lean with whatever tab is required, depending on whether the wind hits you on the port or stbd quarter using the procedure I outlined above. It will fix it no prob.
They also save relationships:
Scenario: Husband & Wife take a day cruise: She's pissed because she's gained a few and no longer looks good in her outfits. The Grady planes off, she's in the passenger seat in a bad mood, the boat is listing to port because of you-know-what. The Husband unobtrusively lowers the port tab, the boat levels and he tells her "You look great..What do you mean, the boats tilting?? It's your imagination!
Marriage Saved; all because of Trim Tabs....
2.) Improving Ride:
Lucky Dude and I have been discussing this concept. Most Gradys after 1992 have the now-famous SeaV2 variable deadrise hull. It starts with an approx 50 degree deadrise in the bow and gradually flattens as you look aft. In a head or quartering sea of significant height and steepness, Gradys tend to pound and slam. This is solved to a degree with your tabs.
Deploy both tabs and the bow will lower as the tabs raise the stern. The idea is to put the bow down so that Point Of Entry where the water hits the hull is as far forward as possible. You want the sharp entry of the bow to split the waves instead of the waves getting a crack at the flatter surface astern. If the Point Of Entry contacts the hull further aft in the flatter section, you will experience pounding and the helmsman will be especially uncomfortable as it will be slapping the hull directly underneath him or her.
Realize that the boat will not stay perfectly level as you depress both toggles to lower the tabs simultaneously. You will have to adjust one tab then the other to fine-tune the process and keep the boat level as you drop the nose. It will become intuitive after a short time.
As the very wise Doc Stressor has said, it's not an efficient running attitude when you have both tabs deployed. As mentioned, the whole idea is to lower the bow for a smoother ride and the trade-off is putting more hull in contact with the water underway, creating more drag. You get a smoother ride, but less MPG. Life is a trade off....
Engine trim also helps with lowering the bow and smoothing out the ride, but not to the degree the tabs do. I will not go into that concept in detail here otherwise our very cool Moderator, Seafarer 228G will Ban me for hogging the system. In my humble opinion, 2 to maybe 3 bars on your trim gauge is a good running angle for the engine if you plan to utilize the tabs to lower the bow.
I consider this VERY IMPORTANT if not ESSENTIAL to your tab education:
1.) When you first start out to learn them, find a stretch of calm, or relatively calm water like a bay or river where you can run for an extended period on plane. It is much easier to learn how the tabs work when your not fighting a rough sea and the boats pitching.
Many people press the toggles, nothing happens immediately, they keep pushing down, and all of a sudden the boat is leaning like crazy to one side and they get startled. Deploy the tabs in short bursts, then pause and wait for the result. It will be a delayed reaction and you won't be over-correcting constantly.
Take your time! Stay in that bay or river until you are thoroughly familiar with how the tabs effect your boats handling and attitude. As you get to know them, they have the potential to become your New Best Friends.
As Columbo says, "One More Thing." Most newer Gradys have an auto-retract feature that fully retracts the tabs when the ignition is shut off. if your does not, be certain to retract them BEFORE you have your Grady fork-lifted out of the water. If the forks happen to contact the tabs when the driver lifts the boat up, the resulting weight on the tabs could damage them. Same procedure when cranking the Grady onto a trailer; make sure the tabs are fully retracted.
Thanks for reading; I was hoping to make this shorter, but I can't seem to, and it's so hard to change Late In Life.....