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Types of Boats
Air Boat
Banana boat
Barge
Bow Rider
Cabin cruiser
Canoe
Catamaran
Cigarette
Coble
Center Console
Cruising Yachts
Cruising trawler
Dinghy
Dragon boat
Dredge
Drift Boat
Durham Boat
Ferry
Fishing Trawler
Fishing boat
Folding boat
Gondola
Houseboat
Hovercraft
Hydrofoil
Hydroplane
Jet ski
Jet Boat
Jon boat
Kayak
Landing craft
Lifeboat
Luxury yacht
Motorboat
Narrow boat
Outrigger canoe
Pontoon
Raft
Riverboat
Runabout
Sailboat
Ski boat
Skiff
Submarine
Surf boat
Trimaran
Tugboat
U-boat
Wakeboard boat
Water taxi
Whaleboat
Yacht
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Wakeboard Boats
Wakeboard Boats have a device that
creates a large wake for a skier (Wake boarder) to jump the wakes
from side to side doing aerial tricks.
Generally speaking, wakeboard specific boats are vDrive boats. This
means they are an inboard boat with the engine placed backwards in
the rear of the boat. Some wakeboard specific boat models are direct
drive boats where the engine is in the middle of the boat. Most
wakeboard boats will have several features that help to create large
wakes. These include Ballast, Wedge, and hull technology.
Most new wakeboarding boats come standard with some sort of
automatic ballast. Generally, these ballast tanks are located inside
of the hull of the boat and can be filled and emptied by switches
located in the drivers area. The ballast weights the boat down,
creating a larger wake when in motion.
The Wedge is a device that helps shape the wake. It is a metal
structure located behind the propeller that helps the driver fine
tune the wake for the athlete. (patented by Malibu Boats).
Hull technology is the innovation and R&D that the manufacturers put
into their boats to ensure the best stock wake possible. Many
boarders use after market ballast and lead to further weight down
their boats for very large wakes or for sports such as wake surfing.
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