matt_unique
New member
I splashed Napoleon yesterday. It was a rough day with strong winds and unusually choppy conditions in Salem Inner Harbor. I will post some pictures later. I plan to return today to dive on my mooring for an inspection and add chafe gear to the pennant lines. I mentioned this in another thread but the proximity of my bow cleats is such that in strong/shifting winds the outside pennant line will *just* touch the anchor. I will add chafe gear to that spot just to be safe. Otherwise my custom bow cleats with SS hull chafe work great! I highly recommend this modification even if only for anchoring.
As we pulled farther into the harbor we had solid 3' seas (some whitecaps) with a short period. I still have "monohull" on the brain and I found myself tightening up anticipating a slam but there was none! I am totally impressed with the way the Tomcat just floated over the waves! I mean these would have been boomers at the same speed in a monohull. No offense to the monohull owners! I was cruising on plane at 18-20 knots @ about 3000/3200 rpm with 3 adults/3 kids and lots of gear (tools, dive gear including my lead weight, tanks, etc.), fully fueled, full water tank, etc. I can't say enough how impressed I was with the way she handled the sea! The roughest conditions I had prior to this day (during test drives and sea trials) was 1' chop and I was really curious to see how she would handle more chop.
I cruised about 8nm round trip. I will try to remember to keep a voyage log to then calculate my average miles per gallon. I may spring for fuel flow gauges prior but I would really like for the manufacturers to figure out the current software/hardware bugs so I can use the full capability of my 2008 engines with NMEA 2000 data exchange capability. Prior to then I will take advantage of the knowledge here to figure out optimum cruise speed.
Phew...a lot of blood sweat and tears to get this boat and to get everything installed. It is a beautiful thing to see all the electronics working! I plan to spend some time today with the manuals to figure out how to use my Furuno radar, chartplotter, etc. Some things are pretty straight forward but I need to adjust the sea clutter, gain, etc. I had plans to dive a few miles offshore but my buddies had to back out with other commitments. That actually worked out well - I can futz around all day learning to use my new equipment.
Thanks again for the months of advice, support, and information!
As we pulled farther into the harbor we had solid 3' seas (some whitecaps) with a short period. I still have "monohull" on the brain and I found myself tightening up anticipating a slam but there was none! I am totally impressed with the way the Tomcat just floated over the waves! I mean these would have been boomers at the same speed in a monohull. No offense to the monohull owners! I was cruising on plane at 18-20 knots @ about 3000/3200 rpm with 3 adults/3 kids and lots of gear (tools, dive gear including my lead weight, tanks, etc.), fully fueled, full water tank, etc. I can't say enough how impressed I was with the way she handled the sea! The roughest conditions I had prior to this day (during test drives and sea trials) was 1' chop and I was really curious to see how she would handle more chop.
I cruised about 8nm round trip. I will try to remember to keep a voyage log to then calculate my average miles per gallon. I may spring for fuel flow gauges prior but I would really like for the manufacturers to figure out the current software/hardware bugs so I can use the full capability of my 2008 engines with NMEA 2000 data exchange capability. Prior to then I will take advantage of the knowledge here to figure out optimum cruise speed.
Phew...a lot of blood sweat and tears to get this boat and to get everything installed. It is a beautiful thing to see all the electronics working! I plan to spend some time today with the manuals to figure out how to use my Furuno radar, chartplotter, etc. Some things are pretty straight forward but I need to adjust the sea clutter, gain, etc. I had plans to dive a few miles offshore but my buddies had to back out with other commitments. That actually worked out well - I can futz around all day learning to use my new equipment.
Thanks again for the months of advice, support, and information!