Many people have PM'd me asking about the designs I made for a few of Steve1’s Cheeta Cat projects, and thanks for the compliments. Since many have asked me about how the CheetahCat was started, and many members have asked about Steve1's skills and seem to really appreciate him sharing his knowledge, I thought I would give Steve1 a “lil” push and jump-start the story of his first Cat project, which will also showcase his skills and philosophies.
As some are familiar with how the Cheetah Cat went from concept to reality, many are not...so I will start from the beginning as I experienced it, and get Steve1 to start posting the good stuff. This is not only about how his design became a reality, but about how his technology developed, which was through a lot of testing, experimenting and some really simple basic common sense. He broke all the "typical" rules and proved many naysayers wrong on his first boat, which UNTESTED and never wet, went on to win the World Championships in Key West in rough water against some serious competitors...and the boat was unique in every aspect, much different than anything else out there; not a copy of anything, he drew the thing on the wall in his shop and it quickly turned into a boat.
AND light isn’t even saying enough, this boat was so light that it sat on empty (4) 5 gallon plastic buckets.
As most know, anyone with money can buy molds, layup a boat, get it rigged, put some cool paint on it, give it a name and go to market, only the Cheetah Cat was different, each boat is designed for each owners’ needs and built with a one-off process, and that construction method is what Steve1 will be discussing, because it is the most unbelievable method and he uses specific systems to allow the boats to be built within the same timeframe as a typical molded boat, but without any restrictions. The boats are designed and built by a formula based on speed, HP, Usage and etc. He just tells me to make it look cool and he’ll handle the rest.
Now, before Steve1 built his first Cheetah Cat, his expertise was utilized to help build the Powerplay reputation of the best fit and finish boats on the market, and this is where we first met – I was involved with sales and Steve1 was building the new sport deck for the 25, which BTW, had about a dozen different deck versions built before Danny could make up his mind. I personally do not care about Dan, but the guy put more attention to detail into his product than any other boat builder ever – and to me, that’s what made his product, BUT, at the same time, that was also his downfall. As he got busier, he wouldn't let a boat go out the door unless it met his expectations...which were usually way too strict for any type of basic production.
As I was very interested in design and function of high performance boats, Steve 1 taught me a lot as we would spend our lunches with drawings, concepts, examples and hours after hour of discussions that even allowed me to “experiment” and build my own stepped vee hull design in the mid 80’s…and using a lot of his input, the boat set the course on fire – if you know who Charlie Haimes, I believe this was his first real race experience as he was a major sponsor (Land N’ Sea) and my navigator.
But anyway, I’ll never forget one afternoon as we sat there one day during lunch talking, and a little Cessna 175 flew overhead – he said to me, “that little plane has ONLY about 100 HP and it will fly over 100 mph”. I cannot remember the exact statement, but he was making a point as to WHY do these boats require 1000+ HP to get that same performance – and once he built that first Cheetah cat, there was no more wondering…he took a 35 foot boat, the owner threw on 2 beat up Mariner outboards and this boat ran side by side with a 32 foot vee with 2 big azz engines, in Key West and took the World Championships. Any doubts, just watch the video.
Steve1 was also involved with the first glass Jaguar project, I think it was a 35 footer…not in the design, but in the lightweight laminate system, which I believe was the fastest cat to run Lake X in its day, AND more interestingly, it survived a 125 mph barrel roll…and was running that afternoon with no damage.
And then once Steve returned from a huge manufacturing project in the Middle East, he was involved with the task of bringing the"new" Apache Powerboat project to life by fixing/repairing the plug work on the first new 41 hull that a company up north butchered. And, of course, he was tooling the new retro style deck while building a special 41 foot one-off with a tri-vent bottom design never seen before – I believe most have read about this adventure...and what a ride it has been!