David wrote:
What makes the Critchfield desirable? Speed, cornering, both?
David thank you for the good question.
The origins of this class and similar classes goes back to the mid 1960’s. The classes developed and became popular with the development of the Deep V hull designs. In the early 1980’s a young man in his twenties named Danny Critchfield designed his own raceboat. He took hull designs from the delta and Allison hulls and combined those with a deck design he saw racing in Europe on Bristol and other boats.
The resulting hull was quicker than the other boats on a race course. Quicker is not about top speed. Quicker the the total time it takes to do a lap around the race course. That is called ET...elapsed time. The Critchfield has very good top speed....corners very well.....accelerates well out of the corner...handles rough water well.
But the boat is only a small part of being successful. You need the complete package boat, boat setup, prop and most important driver and driver’s experience. The boat is NOT the most important.