Scott,
I'm a relative noob to PWCs too, but I've spent the last 35+ years on the water for fun and for work. I've operated all sorts of prop-driven runabouts, two 28' prop-driven water taxis, cruisers up to 60', a 30' twin engine jet powered work boat, and a few sit-down jetskis. My newest project is a 1992 Boston Whaler Rage which came from the factory with a Yamaha 650 and 144mm pump. The Whaler is 13.5' and is supposed to weigh around 850lbs. It has a very flat bottom. My jet experience comes from the workboat I ran, sitdown PWCs, and my Rage.
I just repowered my Rage with a 61x and a brand new Solas 144mm pump with an Impros Hooker impeller. The upgrades have made a huge improvement in handling of the boat because the pump stays hooked up. The motor swap from the 650 to the 701 was necessary mostly to turn the Hooker impeller. With just me aboard, the boat went from 26.5knots with the old drive to 30knots with the new drive. Low speed handling is indistinguishable.
I'm sharing this info with you in an effort to give you a reference point for your project. From my experience and understanding, the low speed operation of a jet is mostly due to the amount of water you can move...more obviously being better. This isn't so much a question of turning the impeller faster but more a matter of the pump size and the interaction with the jet stream and the stationary water behind the boat. In this regard your FX1 pump is very undersized.
I have just fitted a trim nozzle to my boat and hope to get it operational this weekend. My goal is to trim down to assist the boat getting "out of the hole" (aka up on plane). Right now if two people are on the rear bench seat (captain and passenger) the boat struggles to get on plane, even with full throttle. Looking at your pics, I think that 30knots is unlikely to be achieved. If your boat can get on plane, I suspect you'll be closer to 20-25knots. If you can't get on plane you'll be stuck in the water doing 7knots. With a jet there isn't much in between. Personally I would create some fixed trim tabs for initial sea trials and just get the boat out on the water and experiment.
I know that parts/supplies are difficult where you are. I have lived and worked in the high Canadian Arctic and have seen firsthand the improvisation and ingenuity of the residents. Down in civilization people would scoff at what's up north, but the residents up there have no other options and don't care what the "southerners" think. I imagine you're in a similar situation. I hope this info is useful to you and I wish you success with your project.