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  #31  
Old 10-07-2015, 09:44 AM
DonV DonV is offline
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I'm with ya Terry!! Very light fuel load, perfect water, slight wind at my back, light load of beer I can see 50 on the Raymarine, however the fuel flow is showing numbers like yours that do not compute in my financial world.
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  #32  
Old 10-07-2015, 12:07 PM
kmoose kmoose is offline
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I'm installing nitrous next week as soon as I get back from New Jersey to watch Mel's team lose to the Saints.
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  #33  
Old 10-07-2015, 12:35 PM
DonV DonV is offline
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Yuck!!! Back from New Jersey?!?! Dang Ken, what did you do wrong to deserve such a fate? You will be OK, a few days in beautiful Marion County and things will be back to normal!
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  #34  
Old 10-07-2015, 07:12 PM
gofastsandman gofastsandman is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fr. Frank View Post
The 48 mph number we achieved in the Chaparral was was statute mph, NOT nautical mph. So translate that to 41-42 kts. That was the speed showing on the GPS, trimmed out WOT in a moderate chop to choppy conditions in Choctawhatchee Bay. We reached 45 mph easily, and then played with the drive trim, and she gradually eased up to a max speed of 48 statute miles per hour.

It makes no difference whether you believe it or not. Not my boat, not my motor: I have no dog in this hunt. It was just an interesting day on the water, which is generally better than an interesting day on the shore.

On the other hand, MY 1987 Chaparral 198F with its 1988 Johnson 140 Looper can reach a WOT speed of 39 mph at 5400 rpms, cruises at 25 mph inshore, burning about 7.5-8.0 gph at cruise.
My '71 Seafari with original Mercruiser 140 ran about 24 mph at cruise for 5 minutes before blowing the headgasket. No idea how much fuel I used.
THOSE are My claims.
I was referring to the derail, not your numbers.
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  #35  
Old 10-07-2015, 07:52 PM
Terry England Terry England is offline
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Default Diesel RPMs

The diesels engine needs about 22 to 1 compression ratio to detonate the fuel. To do that you need a long stroke engine or you will put an awfull lot of load on the top end. My "rule of thumb" research is that 3400 RPM Volvos, Yanmars and Vws last 6 to 10 years. 2400 RPM 3208 Cats last 15 to 25 years and 1800 rpm in-line Detroits last 20 - 30 years. If you spool 'em up you'll burn 'em down.
The old 170 Yanmar put out the same torque as a 454 at 3200 rpm's. the problem is the Yanmar was "against the wood" and the 454 was a half throttle. I run them all easy - an engine only has so many "frams" in - no use in using them all up today. Equipment is expensive to replace and It's tough to figure out how to depreciate "toys" with the IRS!!!
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  #36  
Old 10-07-2015, 11:14 PM
Bushwacker Bushwacker is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Terry England View Post
The diesels engine needs about 22 to 1 compression ratio to detonate the fuel. To do that you need a long stroke engine or you will put an awfull lot of load on the top end. My "rule of thumb" research is that 3400 RPM Volvos, Yanmars and Vws last 6 to 10 years. 2400 RPM 3208 Cats last 15 to 25 years and 1800 rpm in-line Detroits last 20 - 30 years. If you spool 'em up you'll burn 'em down.
The old 170 Yanmar put out the same torque as a 454 at 3200 rpm's. the problem is the Yanmar was "against the wood" and the 454 was a half throttle. I run them all easy - an engine only has so many "frams" in - no use in using them all up today. Equipment is expensive to replace and It's tough to figure out how to depreciate "toys" with the IRS!!!
Terry's right, "high speed" diesels often don't last any longer than gas engines, per yacht surveyor Dave Pascoe, who has lots of experience with them and has written several articles on the subject. He's also addressed the "Gas vs. Diesel" subject at length.

Although slow speed diesels like the old Ford/Lehman are noted for lasting 6,000-10,000+ hours cruising at 1400 rpm in an 8 kt trawler, that engine only develops 135 HP from 360 Cu. in., or .375 hp/cu in.! The Mercruiser diesel is developing over 1.2 hp/cu in., so if you figure engine life is inversely proportional to hp/cu in., I'd be surprised if it lived for more than a few hundred hrs in a marine application! Although it's performance is indeed impressive, the big question is, for how long?!
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  #37  
Old 10-08-2015, 12:35 AM
jdm61 jdm61 is offline
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I would expect a bit more than a couple of hundred hours out of the VW's. The one thing that they have gong for them is a graphitic iron block like the Duramax engines. The base 2 liter VW only puts out like 57 hp per liter.
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  #38  
Old 10-08-2015, 12:36 AM
jdm61 jdm61 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Terry England View Post
The diesels engine needs about 22 to 1 compression ratio to detonate the fuel. To do that you need a long stroke engine or you will put an awfull lot of load on the top end. My "rule of thumb" research is that 3400 RPM Volvos, Yanmars and Vws last 6 to 10 years. 2400 RPM 3208 Cats last 15 to 25 years and 1800 rpm in-line Detroits last 20 - 30 years. If you spool 'em up you'll burn 'em down.
The old 170 Yanmar put out the same torque as a 454 at 3200 rpm's. the problem is the Yanmar was "against the wood" and the 454 was a half throttle. I run them all easy - an engine only has so many "frams" in - no use in using them all up today. Equipment is expensive to replace and It's tough to figure out how to depreciate "toys" with the IRS!!!
The Tier 3 VW's run a 16.4-1 compression ratio. As for the 170 Yanmars, I see a hell of a lot of them still running after many years. There was a gringo owner in Mazatlan who ran a couple of old 29 Robalo express boots as charter boats with pairs of those very engines. 20 plus miles out to the fishing grounds every day and 20 miles back for years. Those are 3.5 liter blocks that weighed 900 pounds dry. I was a history major, but I think that works out for less than 50 hp per liter. As for torque, don't turbodiesels tend to produce much of their torque well off of WOT? The current 550 hp Cumins QSB 6.7 has a top end of 3200 rpm but produces max torque starting at 2000 rpm. Mercury doesn't have a torque curve for the diesels or the gassers on it's performance reports. I did look up the similar 150 hp BMW based By series Yanmar 2 liter TDI. It has a top end of 4000 rpm but reaches peak torque at 2500 and holds it up to around 3500 which is about 100 rpm's shy of the max continuous rating for that engine. That would lead me to believe that if the old 4LH series 3.5 liter Yanmar actually put out the same torque at 3200 as the 454, it probably put out MORE at 2500.
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  #39  
Old 10-08-2015, 08:07 AM
Terry England Terry England is offline
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jdm61
I agree with you that the 4LH - 170 Yanmar is an excellent small lightweight Marine diesel. Tino and Adib Mastry sold warehouses full of them and many are still running strongly today. I think the Cat 3208-T in 320 Hp rating is a very good motor, but the 210 hp rated 3208's are still pushing around wooden Grand Banks. The Detroit Diesel 71 series in 3 and 6 cylinder in-line configurations is a very good design and has been around since WWII. The Stewart and Stevenson 671 made 450 HP but it's tough to find one that has 1500 hours on it and still runs. The 40 year old 210 HP 671's are still working every day in fishing boats tugs and crew boats. Of course their captains have gone deaf! After 15 years, Ford is still on a mission to show Internation Harvester how to make a high horsepower V-8 diesel for their trucks. The problem is they they really haven't come up with anything better that the 7.3 "Corn Binder" in about 230 hp rating.
It's had to make lots of horsepower in a small engine without creating alot of harmful heat. If you have a little more cubic inches and turn them easy they will last much longer. I just always notice the boat adds say "2002 32' Luhrs, fresh Yanmars......" and some say "1978 34 Hatteras, 265hp - 3208 Cats.....runs good".
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  #40  
Old 10-08-2015, 12:46 PM
jdm61 jdm61 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Terry England View Post
jdm61
I agree with you that the 4LH - 170 Yanmar is an excellent small lightweight Marine diesel. Tino and Adib Mastry sold warehouses full of them and many are still running strongly today. I think the Cat 3208-T in 320 Hp rating is a very good motor, but the 210 hp rated 3208's are still pushing around wooden Grand Banks. The Detroit Diesel 71 series in 3 and 6 cylinder in-line configurations is a very good design and has been around since WWII. The Stewart and Stevenson 671 made 450 HP but it's tough to find one that has 1500 hours on it and still runs. The 40 year old 210 HP 671's are still working every day in fishing boats tugs and crew boats. Of course their captains have gone deaf! After 15 years, Ford is still on a mission to show Internation Harvester how to make a high horsepower V-8 diesel for their trucks. The problem is they they really haven't come up with anything better that the 7.3 "Corn Binder" in about 230 hp rating.
It's had to make lots of horsepower in a small engine without creating alot of harmful heat. If you have a little more cubic inches and turn them easy they will last much longer. I just always notice the boat adds say "2002 32' Luhrs, fresh Yanmars......" and some say "1978 34 Hatteras, 265hp - 3208 Cats.....runs good".
That is the case with most engines when you jack them up. With that said, I think that there is a lot of fairytale stuff and misinformation in the marine industry, The outboard crowd will tell you how unreliable gasser inboards with outdrives are, yet they will rave about their engines that get about the same horsepower out of significantly smaller aluminum blocks , sometimes supercharged. The "commercial" diesel crowd will tell you how unreliable automotive diesels are, yet turn right around and tell you how they get 10,000 hours out of their marinized light truck (automotive) engine. Likewise, they will try to tell you that a Cummins light truck engine will last forever, but any attempt to marinize say a Duramax will end in disaster, when said Duramx engines apparently have the same level of endurance that the Cummins B series have in commercial light to medium trucks.
As a bit of anecdotal evidence, my dad had a 65 Monterey with jacked up Bivens 16V92's that allegedly put out close to 1700 hp when fresh. They would push that big boat to a top speed of 43 knots with a semi normal fuel and gear load. When he got the boat, they had just been rebuilt. Those engines are supposed to be grenades that you will be lucky to get 1500 hours out of, right? By the time he sold the boat, he had put 4000 hours in the engines and although they were a bit tired, they were still running fine. Of course, one part of that was that our captain typically cruised it at over 1800-1850 rpm and around 28-29 knots instead of the "normal fast cruise' in the mid 30 know range or so, but there you have it. My point being that these automotive diesels are replacements for the automotive engines currently used in recreational boating. I includes outboard in that category, because many of the 4 strokes have automotive roots and it is only recently that we have seen "purpose built" large 4 stock outboard blocks, albeit ones based on automotive technology, but lagging a few years behind. So really, the fair comparison would actually be who the automotive diesels compare to their gas counterparts in automotive applications and then extrapolate for the increased stresses of marine application. The trick with the diesels will be to get the PRICING more in line with that of gas vs diesel in the automotive world where the difference is a couple of thousand dollars not TENS of thousands., but that seems to be coming as more small diesels are marinated. Of course, the bad news is that the economies of scale in the recreational marine industry are such that we can perhaps only hope that the cost of the small diesel engines will eventually get to be slightly less that the cost of the base model of the entire car that they were sourced from, much like Honda and Yamaha outboards. We appear to be at that point with this 150 VW TDI engine. LOL
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