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No wake speed varies from state to state. In Arizona, the term used is wakeless speed. It is defined as "a speed that does not cause the watercraft to create a wake, but in no case in excess of five miles per hour." The general interpretation is that if your watercraft creates such a wake that it breaks, or otherwise generates what is called "white water", or water that has been disturbed enough that it creates bubbles or visible waves of any size, you are traveling above no wake speed. If you place your watercraft engine in gear, and add no additional engine speed once the propeller engages, you should be traveling at an adequate speed to not generate a wake; idle speed. I would say this could be from 600-800 engine RPM's. Check your specific state's boating laws, however, to find the correct interpretation of no wake or wakeless speed in your state.
a wake is followed and filled in by more of the same, such as the wake of a ship, whereas a cavity is emptied and remains empty
The ghost are really when you wake up 2-3 am someone starring at you :D
Sometimes people are too tired to wake up,
Wake
In Virginia, you must operate at slow-no-wake speed within 50 feet of boat ramps, marinas and moorages.
In Virginia, you must operate at slow-no-wake speed within 50 feet of boat ramps, marinas and moorages.
In Virginia, you must operate at slow-no-wake speed within 50 feet of boat ramps, marinas and moorages.
no
Slow, No wake speed
yes.
Question:What is the maximum legal speed you may operate a PWC when within 50 feet of any other vessel, PWC, or person in the water?a:10 mphb:15 mphc:"slow, no wake" speedd:"small wake" speedYour Answer:dCorrect:cExplanation:PWCs must operate in a careful and responsible manner. Specifically, it is illegal for PWC operators to: a) Weave the PWC through congested waterway traffic; b) Jump the wake of another motorboat when visibility is obstructed; c) Become airborne while crossing the wake of another motorboat and within 100 feet of that motorboat; d) Operate at greater than "slow, no wake" speed within 50 feet of any other vessel, PWC, or person in the water; e) Operate in a manner that requires swerving at the last possible moment to avoid collision.Question:What is the maximum legal speed you may operate a PWC when within 50 feet of any other vessel, PWC, or person in the water?a:10 mphb:15 mphc:"slow, no wake" speedd:"small wake" speedYour Answer:dCorrect:cExplanation:PWCs must operate in a careful and responsible manner. Specifically, it is illegal for PWC operators to: a) Weave the PWC through congested waterway traffic; b) Jump the wake of another motorboat when visibility is obstructed; c) Become airborne while crossing the wake of another motorboat and within 100 feet of that motorboat; d) Operate at greater than "slow, no wake" speed within 50 feet of any other vessel, PWC, or person in the water; e) Operate in a manner that requires swerving at the last possible moment to avoid collision."Slow", "No Wake Speed"from my.boat-ed.com
25 feet
500 yards
200 feet
A no wake speed means the boat is going slow enough that there is no wake behind the boat.
200