Anyone want to suggest how this would vary on a G25? It seems like all the same principles apply, but I have heard that the additional surface area of the G25 hurts the surf wake just a bit, and additional weight can help. But the only hard data I have is one person suggesting 1200 lbs of lead in a G25 versus the 800 gregmck mentions above? (I have 700 in the boat now, and that works well with similar settings, except I am using NCRS 3, NSS 4 (but not sure if that is best yet), at about 11.5 mph.
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I had use of a G25 for six weeks. It does take additional weight to produce a great wave. I would suggest 300lbs in the bow. (150lbs under each bow seat). 300lbs under front passenger seat, 300lbs under each rear passenger seat for a total weight of 1200lbs. This assumes you run with a small crew. You can drop 100lbs under each middle and rear seats (less 300lbs) if you run with 4-5+ people.
Curious why NSS 4? I have never seen any advanced rider use NSS in any setting other than 0. Are you skim style? You will get a better wave at NCRS 2 or 3 with NSS at 0.
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1,000 Post Club Member
- May 2013
- 2792
- Smith Mountain Lake, VA (Craddock Creek area)
- 2017 G23 Coastal Edition H6 | 2001 Sport Nautique | 1981 Ski Nautique
Gregg not to complicate this thread have you ever filled the left and right ballasts to only 50% vs 70% with 100 % in bow ballast to elongate and smooth out the wave for skim boarders learing surface 360s. Don't know if it would make the boat unsafe but curious if you had ever experimented with the settings I have stated.
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Originally posted by GMLIII View PostGregg not to complicate this thread have you ever filled the left and right ballasts to only 50% vs 70% with 100 % in bow ballast to elongate and smooth out the wave for skim boarders learing surface 360s. Don't know if it would make the boat unsafe but curious if you had ever experimented with the settings I have stated.
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Senior Member of PLANETNAUTIQUE
- Oct 2016
- 381
- Georgia
- 1998 Air Nautique sold 2012 2005SANTE210 sold 2019 2019 GS20 H6
Doesn’t the G23 already have the biggest And best wake in the industry? Why is all the extra weight needed? Isn’t the boat amazing as it comes from the factory?
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1,000 Post Club Member
- May 2013
- 2792
- Smith Mountain Lake, VA (Craddock Creek area)
- 2017 G23 Coastal Edition H6 | 2001 Sport Nautique | 1981 Ski Nautique
Originally posted by Phil8uga View PostDoesn’t the G23 already have the biggest And best wake in the industry? Why is all the extra weight needed? Isn’t the boat amazing as it comes from the factory?
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Originally posted by Phil8uga View PostDoesn’t the G23 already have the biggest And best wake in the industry? Why is all the extra weight needed? Isn’t the boat amazing as it comes from the factory?
Sent from my iPhone using PLT NautiqueLast edited by greggmck; 09-10-2019, 01:43 PM.
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Gregg,
I'm the guy that asked where the diagram was posted on FB a couple weeks ago. I ended up only doing the 500# and got it in the boat on Monday using your recipe … and it works great! So thanks for putting the info out there. In regards to the extra 200# on port side … is this ONLY to counter prop torque … or does your crew favor port side riding? Visually … the wave on port side seems a little bigger than starboard now. In other words, do you relocate a bag or two for the goofy riders?
Last edited by jasander77; 09-13-2019, 08:19 AM.
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Originally posted by jasander77 View PostGregg,
I'm the guy that asked where the diagram was posted on FB a couple weeks ago. I ended up only doing the 500# and got it in the boat on Monday using your recipe … and it works great! So thanks for putting the info out there. In regards to the extra 200# on port side … is this ONLY to counter prop torque … or does your crew favor port side riding? Visually … the wave on port side seems a little bigger than starboard now. In other words, do you relocate a bag or two for the goofy riders?
Heelside Air 3 https://youtu.be/HHztRwGoSAA
Heelside Tweeked Air https://youtu.be/RP8OVLkkU9M
I have never seen the regular wave be bigger than the goofy side? Remember the port (regular) and starboard (goofy) sides are referenced when facing the bow of the boat.Last edited by greggmck; 09-13-2019, 11:07 AM.
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Originally posted by greggmck View Post
Thanks. In competition one scores much higher by performing tricks on both sides of the boat. So we practice both sides of the boat equally and want the waves to be as similar as possible Goofy (starboard) same as Regular (port). The prop rotates counter clockwise (to the port side from the top of the prop) so this causes rotational torque on the starboard side (goofy) which makes the goofy wave much bigger than the regular wave. So by adding 200-300 lbs on the port side (under front passenger seat) the waves are more symmetrical in size. That said there are still times we will reduce the NCRS when riding goofy to flatten the wave even more because it is really tough to land high air tricks on that very steep wave. Just for fun here are a couple of slow motion shots of some pretty cool heel side tricks. These are really difficult to do without flattening the wave.
Heelside Air 3 https://youtu.be/HHztRwGoSAA
Heelside Tweeked Air https://youtu.be/RP8OVLkkU9M
I have never seen the regular wave be bigger than the goofy side? Remember the port (regular) and starboard (goofy) sides are referenced when facing the bow of the boat.
That was some impressive air on the tweaked heel side btw!
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Originally posted by jasander77 View Post
Thanks for again for the info. I thought that was likely the case, but just wanted to be sure. I've been surfing for a long time and did a lot of experimenting on my last boat because it was a wake boat, but not a surf boat by nature. Just trying to minimize my time spent since you've likely exhausted most/all scenarios. I honestly didn't know if it was actually bigger or just the POV from the helm. I did ride the port wave heel side and there was a much improved difference for sure. We've put over 200 hours on our '18 since last July and it's typically just my 115# wife in the boat driving. And … rarely have more than one couple with us when we have guests … and they're all thin people. We recently had around 1000# of bodies and was blown away how much better it was … and why I became interested in the lead. As I mentioned, we've been surfing for a long time, but have only really seen a difference in my progression since we bought the G last year. Excited to see what this does for my progression.
That was some impressive air on the tweaked heel side btw!
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Originally posted by greggmck View PostCurious why NSS 4? I have never seen any advanced rider use NSS in any setting other than 0. Are you skim style? You will get a better wave at NCRS 2 or 3 with NSS at 0.
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Originally posted by jasander77 View PostGregg,
I'm the guy that asked where the diagram was posted on FB a couple weeks ago. I ended up only doing the 500# and got it in the boat on Monday using your recipe … and it works great! So thanks for putting the info out there. In regards to the extra 200# on port side … is this ONLY to counter prop torque … or does your crew favor port side riding? Visually … the wave on port side seems a little bigger than starboard now. In other words, do you relocate a bag or two for the goofy riders?
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Originally posted by Mahnal View Post
My brother and I both liked the steep wave. But we will see what 0 does tomorrow. Default being 5/5, we just stared there and have made tweeks along the way. We ride a hyper lite shim, and a h/l landlock. I have a soul craft voodoo on the way.
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I only ever ran nss 0 and ncrs 5
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