I have issues with the finish quality of my boat and my intake looks about the same. Its fine if I roll into the throttle but if I get too aggressive it will cavitate and slip without a doubt. I would imagine that this is somewhat normal(ish) being that my boat is not designed as a race boat but its my first jet boat so IDK.
I would believe that most jet boat intakes are designed best for being on a plane(?) and sort of sacrifice taking off from a dead stop. A jet engine is very similar. The engine is most efficient when air is clean, coming in straight with little to no disturbances. the intake of a jet engine is physically smooth, not a single rivet head or screw sticking out and all the gaps are sealed with a specific sealant. if a rivet or screw is sticking out and a chunk of sealant is missing you will likely create very disturbed air behind it. these will enter the compressors and if bad enough would cause a compressor stall.
below is what happens if the angle of air flow is to great. sort of similar situation where the air gets sloppy and enters the compressors and ultimately stalls the engine. when you take off on the jet boat from a stop the bow jumps up and the intake angle changes drastically and sometimes its to drastic to handle so the impeller cavitates because of a low pressure situation.
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so think about all that ugly sealant and what the water is doing as it passes. it gets stuck in the gaps, gets distorted on the chunks and when it gets to the impeller, its all out of shape. rolling into the throttle slower keeps the bow down and the water coming in more clean.
at least this is what I understand
All that being said the intakes are smallish and I do think that sealing up the gaps and cleaning up the intake in general could make a drastic difference in performance. I've read and have been told that my boat should hit 43mph but I have yet to see anything higher than 39. I'm curious if cleaning up the intakes would help.
What concerns me most on my boat is that the intake duct sits about 1/4 in or more in places higher than the impeller housing. this I may have to take off and file it down.
Good Luck,
-Mark