Good point J2NH, you may have seen this boat, it was a Mastercraft Pro Star that had a custom transmission, 2 shafts coming out the back which subsequently made the boat a twin screw inboard. He did a demonstration one year at the Nationals in Loves Park, pulled a large number of small kids up deepwater. I have also seen a team using 2 Nautiques running in tandem to pull up thier big act, the lead boat released and sped ahead after the act was up.
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To confirm what has been said, big acts need some form of a twin rig. I believe is is all about the number of props in the water. For a year, we had two 150 motors on our twin rig, and it would still outpull my 310 hp GT-40 in my Ski. Havre you seen the Evinrude infomercial on late night tv? They do a segment on a triple engine Dynaski pulling four 4 tier pyramids. Thats 48 people. The twin screw MC is an idea, but it will either need two engines, with a big weight penalty, or a complicated, power losing transmission setup, that probably is not very light.
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Very true! The extra "bite" that twin outboards offer is definately an advantage. No doubt about it.
But I disagree that horsepower isn't important. Your not gonna pull off a pyramid with a pair of 50 hp engines. It takes raw power and torque to get the job done in combination with being able to put that power to the water.
:mrgreen:
I can't wait to try your little trick with the lifting rings..........that has potential. Thanks
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