Garth, flying virtually the identical plane to yours, I can shed some light on this subject. As you know, mine is a 73 182P, with Aerocet 3500's and the Pponk motor. Mike V. hit the nail on the head with the prop. Unfortunately I think you said in a prior post you had just bought a new 3 blade Hartzell. When I first bought mine it had the 3 blade 401 mac on it, which I would guess weighs about the same as your Hartzell (heavy). I never ran the numbers, but I can tell you with a good load of fuel, two front seaters, and nothing in the back, cg was forward. Frequently would run out of trim when landing. After talking with Larry at Flight Resources, he convinced me the the 2 blade MT would probably be the optimum prop for my motor vs the 3 blade. He said over 300hp go with 3, 300 and under 2. It saved me 41 pounds on the nose of the plane vs the 3 blade Mac. The difference in flight characterstics, particularly landings, was incredible. The MT outperformed the mac in all aspects. That amount of weight saved on the nose of the plane with all that arm forward of the cg makes it a different plane. I assume your battery is already aft of the rear baggage like most 182Ps. Also like MTV said put your survival gear full aft, that's what I do. Plus, when flying 2 passengers of more, I frequently put the big guy in the back. Be careful of putting to much weight to far forward in those large Aerocet float lockers. Gas cans, boat motors, etc should be as far back in the compartment as possible. I also put heavy stuff like beer full aft in rear baggage. You will get used to loading your plane differently than your maule, which I suspect liked weight forward. You have the HP and floats to get off the water with a slightly aft CG. You'll be all smiles the first time you have it on the water. If you haven't already broke the bank I would highly recommend the wing extensions. Make a big difference for float flying when loaded. One other thing you'll find, with the extended baggage and huge float lockers, it is possible and tempting to overload it. With the 88 gallon wings pay close attention to fuel load. Don't be tempted to carry fuel you don't need. Get a good fuel computer and use it. Flying around with 50 gallons instead of 80 really helps when you don't need all that gas. Hopefully we can hook up this summer and you can try my plane. Russ