Ya, I mean with the previous power (115 4s), I would use my trim tabs at full nose down to get out of the hole, then back them off completely, trim out the outboard and then if necessary touch them a little bit to level the boat, but never had to used them to keep the nose down.
So really I only used the trim tabs for launch, and leveling left to right, never to keep the nose down. I had plenty of fore/aft trim control from the outboard (which had a foil, and needed a foil as it was underpowered).
Now I dont need full tabs for launch, but I use them any way because it gets me level much much faster, and it's my old habit. But with this new set up, once on plane, I need the trim tabs at about half way down (they create some spray) and I cannot release the motor trim at all or I get porpoising.
The porpoising/inability to trim out the outboard at a medium cruise speed is really the issue I'm trying to fight now. The spray issues have subsided considerably since I moved the transducer and added the bow weight/ redistributed my gear to the cuddy lockers rather than under the seats.
But that's for normal cruising speed up to ~25knots and up to 4000rpm. In all cases, whether before I had weight in the bow or not, or whether I had the foil on or not, if I kicked the speed up to 30 knots or higher, this all changes. But I have to say, I don't want to be cruising at 30-35 knots at 4500-5300 RPM. Once I get going that fast, I can release the trim tabs and back them off all the way. And I can trim out the outboard without getting porpoising. Also, no caviatation when going into a tight turn at 30 knots, same as when I go into a tight turn at 20 knots.
So I guess I just have to avoid the medium speed and only travel and high speed? But I'd really rather not. I like 22-26knots and staying under 4000 RPM for noise on deck, fuel burn, safety/reaction time, comfort in light chop etc etc.
For the poster a few back, here's my numbers again.
Prop: Solas Rubex 15.3x19 3Plus 9511-153-19
Outboard: 2025 Merc Seapro 150 (2.08 gear ratio, 4.75" case)
WOT range: 4800-5300
Boat: 18ft Malibu 182 (Cuddy with similar design to the DE185) Max HP hull rating is 175. It's definitely an butt heavy boat with a rounded bottom from the mid point back.
Performance numbers with really any load I've tried so far
3500 - 23mph 20 knots
4000 - 29mph 25-26 knots
4500 - 35mph 30 knots
5200 - 40mph 35knots - This is WOT for this prop and setup with both a 2 passenger medium load full fuel and a 4 passenger load with bow locker ~60 pounts of ballast and all other heavy stuff in the cuddy lockers. I got it to 5300 once under perfect glass conditions and about 20-30 seconds of getting the trim perfect and watching the needle slowly creeping up from 5000. As mentioned, once over 4500RPM I can release the trim tabs and start to trim out the outboard.
No, I don't have an pictures of the spray, cav plate etc when at top speed.
And I wouldn't disagree that I'd get better performance with a different prop. I was offered this prop to test since it's used and at a reasonable price from a prop shop. I think it's well suited for the RPM WOT spec, but I definitely would be interested in a second prop and keep this one as a spare tire, especially if there's some optimizing for stern lift and performance, especially if I raise the motor one last hole to get the cav plate clear of the waterline.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like to combat the porpoising I need to add more weight to the bow before I go raising the motor another notch, probably go extreme and try another 100lb on top of what I already have there.
I don't think I'll ever enjoy seeing a porpoise again

