Yeah I spent most of my life skiing behind boats that were somewhat "under powered" for the task. Spent a lot of time dragging. lol I learned to slalom at a young age and skied behind any boat I would get to pull me. We had lots of friends with boats and I got to ski behind all kinds of boats. I was lucky enough to get to ski behind master crafts a lot. They are great for what they do, which is pull skiers. Other than that they weren't very practical. (maybe some of the newer ones are a little more "family friendly") but our family stuck with something a little more versatile. We had a Larson, a Sea Sprite, a Rinker, a Glastron, a Four Winns.... I think that's it. They all had differing levels of power they weren't "ski boats" so they would drag you through the water for a good bit before they could get you up on one ski. Some were more of a drag than others but in the end you would end up on top the water. The last boat my dad had was was a 19' Rinker with a carbed 4.3 just like you mentioned. we had four or more 200 pound adults in the boat and a 200 pound skier out back, it took a bit but she would get you up every time. So I'm no stranger to the drag, and I don't expect this boat to pop me out of the water like a master craft. However when there is ZERO chance of me getting up behind this boat, even with just a couple people on board, in my opinion something needs to be adjusted. I don't mind if there's some dragging but if a very experienced skier stands no chance of getting up behind the boat, I need to make a change. At the end of the day if I can't take my son, or nieces and nephews skiing and tubing then I either need to adjust the prop, or get a new boat because for us, a boat we cant ski and tube behind isn't getting the job done. I don't mind buying a new boat if that's what is needed but before I do that I'm trying to experiment with some props.