GENERAL LEE
Founding Member - E Dock
It's not the speed. Stepped boats pitched the occupants and sometimes continued on operator-less and they've barrel-rolled at under 40 mph. Like the one in Europe that looped around and ended up on the rocks. Or the one on Barnegat a couple summers ago- guy was going slow and just heeled around on plane. Had parents/grandparents out for a slow cruise on the bay. Everyone got tossed.
If you're with someone that can show you the edge and what it feels like, you can learn to keep yourself out of trouble. These boats don't "just hook". You can feel the bottom and the steps releasing. You can develop a feel for what you're boat will do and then know in advance. But there's no such thing at "correct settings" That's very much affected by how you're changing the boat's weight and balance. You take on 250 gallons of fuel and 3 more passengers, you just added 2,000 lbs of weight and moved the boats center of gravity. That's going to affect how the bottom holds the water.
Now, under race conditions in sloppy water and high speed, that's a different story. You can hook a straigh-bottomed boat with enough effort and the wrong settings.
In the end, a step boat just can't be oerated like a straight-bottomed boat. And the animal in there waiting to jump out and bite you hard is the event that happens in an instant. Running in close proximity to hazards or not knowing the water- that jetski that darts between the two anchored boats you're passing, or that shoal that you didn't know about and just caught sight of... those scenarios really don't give you time to make proper adjustments and apply steering techniques. Those are jerk-the-wheel events. And the only way to make sure you don't end up in a catastrophe is to avoid the situation. Step boats aren't a free lunch. That extra speed comes with a price- sometimes a big one.
This should be the opening statement on the site when someone logs in. :sifone: