Most things are designed to take advantage of the best technology available at the time. In the 1950s, when the Ford of England diesel (Dover model) that became the base engine for the Ford Lehman 120 was designed, jerk-injection fuel pumps (the Simms pump) and single-weight oils were considered the best technology at that time. Also, relatively low road speeds and lighter truck loads were the norm at that time.
However, both road speeds and truck loadings were going up rapidly during the later 50s and early 60s, which is why the Ford Dover proved to be an unsuitable and unsuccessful engine in over-the-road trucks.
So to build on Ken's comments, not only should the type of oil and type of fuel be considered when determining how best to operate an older engine, so should the manner in which it was intended to be operated when it was originally designed. Operating and maintaining an FL120 as though it was a more modern Cummins, John Deere, Volvo, Cat, etc. will simply result in the engine having a much shorter life. If you feed, operate, and maintain a 1950s engine as though it was the 1950s, you'll get the maximum possible life out of the engine, which for an FL120 is pretty long.
I believe this is harder to do with boats than it is with vehicles. Nobody expects a stock '55 Ford to perform like a 2007 Accura. The Ford doesn't even LOOK like it should perform the same way. But our 1973 Grand Banks 36 looks pretty much the same as the 1991 GB36 a few docks over. But where our GB36 has a couple of FL120s in it, the one on the other dock has a couple of Cummins Turbo 210s in it. If I tried to get the same kind of speeds and service intervals from our Fords, it's doubtful that our engines would get anywhere near the 12,000 to 14,000 hour life these engines have a reputation for.
-- Edited by Marin at 00:56, 2007-12-03
However, both road speeds and truck loadings were going up rapidly during the later 50s and early 60s, which is why the Ford Dover proved to be an unsuitable and unsuccessful engine in over-the-road trucks.
So to build on Ken's comments, not only should the type of oil and type of fuel be considered when determining how best to operate an older engine, so should the manner in which it was intended to be operated when it was originally designed. Operating and maintaining an FL120 as though it was a more modern Cummins, John Deere, Volvo, Cat, etc. will simply result in the engine having a much shorter life. If you feed, operate, and maintain a 1950s engine as though it was the 1950s, you'll get the maximum possible life out of the engine, which for an FL120 is pretty long.
I believe this is harder to do with boats than it is with vehicles. Nobody expects a stock '55 Ford to perform like a 2007 Accura. The Ford doesn't even LOOK like it should perform the same way. But our 1973 Grand Banks 36 looks pretty much the same as the 1991 GB36 a few docks over. But where our GB36 has a couple of FL120s in it, the one on the other dock has a couple of Cummins Turbo 210s in it. If I tried to get the same kind of speeds and service intervals from our Fords, it's doubtful that our engines would get anywhere near the 12,000 to 14,000 hour life these engines have a reputation for.
-- Edited by Marin at 00:56, 2007-12-03