Stability of Cats
#1
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Joined: Jun 2008
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Have V hull boat now and currently thinking of moving to a cat. How do 30 ft cats handle 2-4 chop and stability at 80-90mph. Dad's buddy had 19' pickle fork he flipped a few years ago. I assume the handling characteristics are different?
#2
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i was a vee boat guy since highschool then rode in my first cat. i went out and got a 25daytona asap and refuse to own another vee. take the time to learn how to drive it and you will be very very happy. im now in a 30' cat and the ride is like no vee in bigger water (asside from mnfg issues) so my advice is take the plunge and you wont be sorry.
BEFORE YOU BUY GET A SURVEY!
BEFORE YOU BUY GET A SURVEY!
#6
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Joined: Feb 2005
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From: Arlington Tx
A 19' picklefork has very shallow sponsons and is very light compared to a catamaran. You don't want to drive one fast in heavy chop which is probably what he did. Those little boats work best in 6"-1' chop.
Take a ride in a 3100, you'll be glad you did.
#9
If you can get into the 36ft range you'd be much more impressed w/ the cat ride. I'll never forget Daytona 2000 and watching the Factory 3 Cats w equal power(500 efi's) smoke the V's w/ the same power.
#10
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Joined: Jul 2002
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From: Troy, Mich
I have a 30 foot Chris Craft Chris Cat and love it. The boat is very stable, does not chine walk, and handles 2-4 great. The 19 ft pickle fork designs are great but in such a short boat anyting over 60-70 mph is asking for trouble.
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