I'm starting to build a Jersey Skiff for a friend, that is a model of his dad's former boat. A little different from what I usually build, but should be a fun vintage project. Here is the description from my friend:
"Time to get nostalgic, the older skiff pictures was my dad’s original bender hull NJ Speed Skiff he built back in the early 80’s when I was a kid. The top picture is a hull he purchased, had painted to match his original, but never built it."
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"Time to get nostalgic, the older skiff pictures was my dad’s original bender hull NJ Speed Skiff he built back in the early 80’s when I was a kid. The top picture is a hull he purchased, had painted to match his original, but never built it."
IMG_0430.jpg IMG_0458.JPG IMG_0460.JPG
Jersey Skiffs are the most fun you can have in FE. Fast and barely in control - they go up on their sides in the turns [ prop digs in, unvents/hull bounces down/prop digs in again/up on the rail/unvents again and so on]. The prop depth is important for sure [and I've not discovered the magic formula yet BTW]. The D19 gas skiffs stay on the rail all through the turn now - took lots of tuning but I'm not there yet with my FE skiff. Seems that at your chosen KV you'd be running 6S - the TP motor is a powerhouse but I'd start small with the prop given that it's submerged. Maybe an X442 to start with. Good luck
One thing I've noticed is that if they are rigged too noseheavy the nose will dig in after a bounce and it will dart off course !
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