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Power Tilt and Trim for Larger Outboard Engines
 Trim tabs help control the attitude of the boat: Deflect the trim tabs down to push the stern of the boat up and the bow down. Many boats are equipped with hydraulic trim tabs, as pictured above.
On the smaller boats, the power tilt and trim or manual tilt mechanism is a
primary way to control the pitch attitude of the boat. Tilt in to make the
bow go down, tilt out to make it go up — those are the basics. You want your
hull running through the water at a comfortable and efficient angle for the
conditions you are encountering. In smooth water, you can find the most
efficient tilt angle by setting the engine to cruise power with the engine
trimmed all the way in, and then gradually trimming out while monitoring
your speed using a GPS. At some point, your speed will max out and begin
dropping and/or your boat will begin to cavitate and porpoise. That means
you just exceeded the best angle.
Larger boats with large outboard or inboard/outboard (sterndrive) engines
are often also equipped with hydraulic trim tabs attached to the hull. Now
there are two ways to control the attitude of the boat: you can deflect the
trim tabs down, pushing the stern up and the bow down, or you can tilt the
engine down, which will tend to do the same thing. Which one to do?
Use the Trim Tabs or the Engine Trim?
The answer will depend on the conditions and on the particular boat and how
it is loaded, but the general idea does not change: Decide on the attitude
at which the boat should plane over the water, and use the trim tabs as
little as possible in order to achieve that angle. If you want the bow down,
try trimming the engine in a little bit. You will not increase the drag of
the engine very much by running it with the thrust directed slightly
downward, and getting the boat to ride at a better attitude may increase
speed for a given throttle setting.
If you achieved the same result using trim tabs, you would have to create some drag by deflecting the tabs down into the flow of water coming off the aft end of the hull. In most cases, that additional drag will be greater than any created by trimming the engine in a bit.
On boats with more than one engine, the engines can be trimmed to slightly different angles to adjust the left and right (roll) attitude of the boat.
Trim the starboard engine out and the port engine in to cause the boat to roll
slightly to port. If you have more weight on the starboard side, causing the
boat to list a bit in that direction while cruising, you can level the boat
back out somewhat by using differential engine trim, and if that is not
enough, use the trim tabs to finish the job.
Trim tabs are very effective, and can overcome large weight imbalances, but they do so at a high price in drag, and any efficiency which may be gained by improving the cruising attitude of the boat will be at least partially offset by that loss.
Hydraulic power tilt and trim on your engine is usually the more efficient
way to adjust your boat's pitch attitude because small changes can be made
without much effect on engine drag or the effective use of thrust, and those
changes can have large effects on the speed, comfort and efficiency with
which the boat planes across the water.
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