The problem with all the above
        
        
          planing hulls was rough water perform-
        
        
          ance. Before 1960 severe pounding in
        
        
          any significant sea was part of the
        
        
          offshore racing scene. This restricted
        
        
          speeds.  In 1960 C. Raymond Hunt
        
        
          designed the first popular, deep vee,
        
        
          offshore racing hull and Richard
        
        
          Bertram’s Moppie won the Miami to
        
        
          Nassau race. This hull carried the deep
        
        
          vee cross section from the bow to the
        
        
          stern with longitudinal strakes for lift.
        
        
          Previous planing hulls had a deep vee
        
        
          bow with a flatter stern and no strakes.
        
        
          The style caught on and many similar
        
        
          deep vee hulls dominated offshore
        
        
          racing. Since any waves are large for
        
        
          model race boats, modern racing mono
        
        
          hulls are all deep vees.
        
        
          Up to this point we’ve been ignoring
        
        
          the effect of air. Since water is 800 times
        
        
          as dense as air, the drag of an object in
        
        
          water will be 800 times as much as the
        
        
          same object in air at the same speed.
        
        
          Try putting your hand in the water at 20
        
        
          mph compared to sticking it out the
        
        
          
            (Continued on page 18)
          
        
        
          PROPWASH
        
        
          
            October 2016
          
        
        
          
            17
          
        
        
          Probably the ultimate stepped
        
        
          unlimited hydroplanes were the Hacker
        
        
          designed My Sweetie and Miss Pepsi.
        
        
          They had a main step with a bump step
        
        
          forward and a stern step. At speed the
        
        
          hulls ran with the bump step nearly out
        
        
          of the water. My Sweetie won the 1949
        
        
          Gold Cup . Miss Pepsi won the
        
        
          Presidents Cup in 1950, 1951, and 1952.
        
        
          She also won the Detroit Memorial Race
        
        
          and the Silver Cup.
        
        
          planing boats got wider and shorter than
        
        
          high speed displacement boats. The
        
        
          classic planing boat was designed to run
        
        
          on smooth water. These wooden planing
        
        
          hulls were the kings of pleasure boats on
        
        
          lakes in the mid 20th century.
        
        
          Early planing designs had continuous
        
        
          bottoms from bow to stern. It was
        
        
          realized fairly early that steps in the
        
        
          bottom would reduce the wetted surface
        
        
          even more. The first attempts used a
        
        
          single step.
        
        
          Of course, if one step was good,
        
        
          more would be better. Eventually
        
        
          shingled bottoms were tried. Some of
        
        
          the most notable stepped hulls were Gar
        
        
          Woods’ Miss Americas.
        
        
          
            A classic speedboat planing
          
        
        
          
            A Hacker 1928 stepped hydroplane
          
        
        
          
            Some modern designs also use a single
          
        
        
          
            step. The Alpha Z
          
        
        
          
            Scotty, a 1929 Gold Cup racer
          
        
        
          
            Shingled bottom
          
        
        
          
            Gar Wood’s Miss America IX
          
        
        
          
            My Sweetie bottom
          
        
        
          
            My Sweetie at speed
          
        
        
          
            Miss Pepsi
          
        
        
          
            Dry Martini, a classic 35 foot Cigarette
          
        
        
          
            1973 deep vee offshore racer