The flagship of Tigé’s Vé series, this 24Vé includes generous wraparound cockpit seating and a walk-across deck aft to the stern platform. The transom activity center offers a seat over the stern platform, plus storage for gear that’s easily misplaced. Tigé’s patented TAPS wake control system lets this 24-footer convert from skiboat to wakeboarder in just a few seconds.
Key Features
All-composite floor with ¾’’ fiberglass-reinforced Urethane Core
Armorflex anti-blistering gelcoat
Hand-laid multi-directional fiberglass hull
Vinylester barrier coat
Waterbonnet curved glass windshield
Flip-up bolster seat
Stainless steel hardware throughout
Oversized removable teak swimstep
PCM power train
Specifications
Tigé 24Vé (2009-) Specifications
Length Overall
24' 0''
Dry Weight
4,320 lbs.
Beam
8'6''
Tested Weight
N/A
Draft
26''
Fuel Cap
48 gal.
Deadrise/Transom
N/A
Water Cap
none
Max Headroom
open
Bridge Clearance
N/A
Prices, features, designs, and equipment are subject to change. Please see your local dealer or visit the builder's website for the latest information available on this boat model.
Tigé designed its ConvexV hull as a non-planing hull that, at wakeboarding speeds, settles naturally creating massive water displacement and big wakes.
Plush Seating Throughout
In addition to its ample seating, the cockpit offers plenty of storage too.
Thoughtful Features
Features like well-placed drink holders throughout the cockpit are real passenger pleasers.
Quick Wake Change
We were able to go from a flat slalom wake to a full wakeboard wake in just a few seconds.
Tigé (pronounced like tiger without the “r”) has revamped their boats’ styling and added a few convenience features – most notably a walk-over deck next to the sunpad and enhanced storage at the transom – to create their Vé series. While the traditional V and Vé series are built on similar hulls, there are some slight differences such as the distinctive hour-glass shaped transom on the 24Vé, which not only adds to the boat’s appearance, but creates a small deck at the stern of the boat. This “activity center,” as Tigé calls it, offers a seat where it’s needed most on a watersports boat – at the swim platform. Beneath this deck, three long, shallow storage compartments keep hats, sunglasses, gloves, binding soap, even tow ropes back at the stern where they’re easy to find. All three compartments are insulated and drain overboard, so any or all can store cold drinks as well.
Deck Layout
Tigé’s walk-over deck provides a nonskid pathway between the swim platform and the cockpit, and also a safe, convenient way to board the boat from the dock. While this does take a bit of space away from the sunpad, it does not reduce seating inside the boat, with a full wrap-around cockpit. To save foot traffic on the seats the cushion in front of the walk-over is carpeted on its bottom, so flipping this seat cushion over provides a place to step without muddying the upholstery. This simple feature will help keep the interior looking new, but because this carpeted step is supported by the squishy foam of the seat cushion I found it just a bit unstable – probably better footing than stepping directly onto a foam seat, but not as rock-solid as it appears to the uninitiated.
Cockpit Features
In addition to its ample seating, the cockpit offers plenty of storage too. Skis can slide under the seat on the port side, where they’re also easy to grab from the swim platform, through a hatch beneath the sunpad. There are two big coolers aboard: one drink cooler under the seat just behind the windshield on the port side, and a large removable Igloo secured beneath the transom walk-over hatch. Accessing the Igloo requires a bit of a reach down into the storage compartment and could be easier to open, but with drinks in the cockpit and at the transom, this shouldn’t be a problem.
Hull Design
Many wakeboard boats sacrifice storage space to ballast tanks and pumps, but Tigé’s TAPS system solves this problem. The more I played with TAPS, Tigé Adjustable Performance System, the more I appreciated Tigé’s “outside the box” thinking.
When first testing a TAPS boat my initial reaction was that the boat required too much adjustment to the trim to get its best performance, which led me to believe that the hull was not designed as well as it could have been. But now that I understand TAPS, I see that my instinctive reaction based on years of evaluating boat’s performance in traditional terms is precisely what has held back wakeboard boat design until now.
Tigé designed their hull as a non-planing hull. At wakeboarding speeds the bow rides high and the boat settles naturally, creating massive water displacement and a big wake without the need for ballast weight. The TAPS plate, essentially a large trim tab in the center of the boat, allows the driver to control how much the boat planes, and therefore how big a wake it makes. In our tests of the 24Vé, we were able to go from a flat slalom wake to a full wakeboard wake in just a few seconds. But it wasn’t the quick conversion that caught my attention. What is interesting about TAPS compared to other wake enhancement systems is that it allows the wake size to be tweaked while the wakeboarder is riding behind the boat, adjusting to the rider’s skill level, fatigue, or sea conditions.
On the Water
Our test boat’s 343-hp PCM EX 343 5.7L inboard gave us a top speed of 43 mph with a 13 ½ by 16 inch 4-blade prop and a 1.48 to 1 reduction ratio ZF transmission. At a comfortable speed of 22.4 mph we traveled 3.25 mpg for a 140 mile range, showing the advantages of the Convex V hull and TAPS.
Designing boats is a compromise, and manufacturers are always trying to build a better mousetrap. We’ve all been in the same boat, where the latest and greatest design turns out to be more sizzle, less steak. But before settling for the cliché that wakeboard boats need ballast, check out the TAPS system. It just may be the greatest thing since sliced bread.
Tigé 24Vé (2009-) Test Result Highlights
Top speed for the Tigé 24Vé (2009-) is 43.0 mph (69.2 kph), burning 22.6 gallons per hour (gph) or 85.54 liters per hour (lph).
Best cruise for the Tigé 24Vé (2009-) is 22.4 mph (36 kph), and the boat gets 3.25 miles per gallon (mpg) or 1.38 kilometers per liter (kpl), giving the boat a cruising range of 140 miles (225.31 kilometers).
Tested power is 1 x 343-hp PCM EX 343 5.7L.
For complete test results including fuel consumption, range and sound levels go to our Test Results section.
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Prices, features, designs, and equipment are subject to change. Please see your local dealer or visit the builder's website for the latest information available on this boat model.
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