watson1987":3igcrw4u said:
Martin - with a RT that has an OB. How do engine trim and trim tabs work together or against each other here?
Last September, 2023, I got lucky with some extremely flat water up at Port Susan, no wind, and slack high tide. I did a bunch of prop testing with the PowerTech OFS4 15pitch. But in addition to getting the numbers I needed, I also took some time to see what happens if I purposely run the engine trim way out of spec. I figured I'd see what the Autoglide would do.
Slowboating
3.83 knots, 1000 RPM. Port 0%, Stbd 0%. 3.33 mpg (boat pitch is -4.0 degrees)
(Autoglide shows me the pitch angle).
The engine is trimmed all the way down to 0% (1 bar).
Midrange
11.2 knots, 3200 RPM. Port 100%, Stbd 0%. 1.69 mpg. (boat pitch 0.0 degrees).
The engine is trimmed to 26% (3 bars)
Cruising Speed
25.7 knots, 5100 RPM. Port 39%, Stbd 0%. 1.45mpg (boat pitch -0.6 degrees)
The engine is trimmed to 17% (3 bars).
WOT
30.7 knots, 5750 RPM. Port 14%, Stbd 0%. 1.3mpg (boat pitch -0.8 degrees).
The engine is trimmed to 18% (3 bars).
Comparison
15.3 knots, 4100 RPM. Port 100%, Stbd 30%. 1.33mpg (boat pitch -0.5 degrees)
The engine is trimmed to 6% (2 bars).
15.5 knots, 4150 RPM, Port 65%, Stbd 0%. 1.41mpg (boat pitch +0.5 degrees)
The engine is trimmed to 20% (3 bars)
The engine trim is necessary as the prop should go straight through the water. As the bow goes up or down the running angle of the boat changes. Engine trim and trim tabs operating together can control the angle of the boat through the water.
I did some more extreme examples, but didn't take pic's of the screen as it was way off. Like, I'd bring the trim up 5, 6 or 7 bars... way high... The auto glide just ran both tabs all the way down to 100% to try and compensate and my fuel efficiency suffered.
I've ran the 3 blade Yamaha prop for 360 engine hours. Then I put on the PowerTech OFS4 15 pitch and have another 400 hours on it. From my experience, the 3 blade is more sensitive to engine trim. (2 or 3 bars, sometimes 4 or 5 if running near WOT). The OFS4 is less sensitive to engine trim. I set it to 3 bars (about 20%). It stays there from 11 knots all the way to WOT at 31 knots. Engine trim with the OFS4 just seems to not make much of a difference in fuel efficiency (as long as it's set around 3 bars).
The engine trim and tabs both should work together to get the boat up and out of the water, on plane. The running angle should be such to minimize the surface area of the boat in contact with the water.
On our SE Alaska trip, Channel Surfing was really heavy. 3 adults, 3 dogs, heading to sea for 2 months. We packed everything but the kitchen sink (thankfully, the boat came with one already, ha!). A lot of the weight was aft as that's where us outboards have the most storage.
At 4.8 knots my pitch angle was -0.7 degrees.
At 10.3 knots, 3500 RPM, on plane, both tabs were down to almost 100%, at 1.3mpg. (boat pitch at 0.5 degrees).
The normal boat pitch for our SE Alaska trip was 1.8 degrees. Port 0%, Stbd 60%. Engine trim at 22% (3 bars), 26.7 knots, 1.26 mpg.
Autoglide worked against me trying to bring the boat pitch down which required both tabs to be fully down. My fuel efficiency suffered. I either needed to re-calibrate Autoglide, throw a bunch of stuff overboard, or use the "favorites" settings on Autoglide to provide an alternative temporary calibration which accounted for the additional weight, or disable Autoglide and operate the tabs manually.
I set the engine trim to 2 or 3 bars when doing 7 knots, deploy both tabs to 100%. Punch the throttles to get the boat up on plane, then retract both tabs. Bring the starboard tab (port switch) all the way up, and use just enough of the port tab (starboard switch) to balance the boat. This is why I like the auto glide so much. It does all this for me and much faster than I ever could. With a 4 blade prop (extra stern lift) and the Autoglide, it doesn't take Channel Surfing long to get up on plane. Hole shot is amazing.
For diesel inboards, the above mostly isn't relevant.
The outboards like 22 to 30 knots, and WOT around 35 knots. They have different hulls than the diesel inboards, more of a planing hull without a keel.
I'm working with PowerTech on testing some custom modified 4 and 5 blade props. The objective is to get into the 10 - 20 knot range (3000 - 4000 RPM) with great fuel efficiency so I can hang back and comfortably cruise with my diesel inboard friends, and extend my range between fuel docks for our trip back to SE Alaska.