Nomad Willy
Guru
The helm is in the wheelhouse where it belongs and w good mechanics others can be installed.
A simple oil pressure switch that shuts down the engine would be more sensible than checking the engine every 2 hours . I just don't get it I jump in my diesel 4x4 fill up the tank drive 10 hours at engine speeds that are 3 x that my Cummins cruses at then drive another 10 hours without looking under the bonnet .If my oil pressure or any other problem arises my dash lights come on am I missing something ???
Bigfish,
Cars have systems that are extremely evolved and developed into a perfect functioning machine whereas millions of them are being made. Maintenance drills are extremely well developed and proven from millions of examples.
Boats are almost all one off machines and very much subject to engineering and systems not fully developed like cars.
So our maintenance is much more intensive.
Keep in mind cameras don't provide smell. Temps...maybe IR, noise...quality could be an issue. I don't think there is any substitute for a personal inspection.
Yes failures can still happen, but usually after something is overlooked by an inexperienced individual. Maybe access around a hot engine in a twin configuration, horrible engine room lighting, etc.,...all add up to inadequate inspections.
But I tend to error on the anxiety filled ADD side
Greetings,
Hmmm...a bit of a drift on this thread but...
The Admiral does the ER checks every couple of hours or so where she "shoots" temperatures, notes filter vacuums, does a general visual and smell check and looks at the stuffing boxes etc. Before going below she records gauge readings and engine hours to which she attaches ER readings and notes.
After a service (belt/filter change or similar) the ER visits are initially more frequent just to make sure the "Captain" didn't, ahem...forget something. Any discrepancies are a reason for the "Captain" to do an ER look-see.
We've got a pretty good system worked out and it has prevented a few potential problems.
We were lucky enough to have a walk in engine room. My wife every hour, would check. We also put white bathroom rugs, over the sole. And of course the temp gun, which she would hit all the usual places, including the stuffing boxes. I trained her early on, about the different smells and colors to look for. Brown, pink, green.
Scott
Interesting that you bring up the car boat comparison. I have a Diesel auto that I have never even opened the hood that has approx 25000 miles. My boat has approx 800 hours and it gets checked before every trip. Why? Because the boats engines live in an environment that is not favorable for long life. Both have gauges and alarms that I do trust but I feel it more necessary to check the bilge than under the hood (and I have twin Diesels).
Art...bigger decision is Wifi or hard wired.
I bought a cheap $13 camera, 720, IR, with a narrow view versus wide.
I turned it into an underwater camera by sticking it in some PVC pipe. Worked great in the Keys, too murky elsewhere so on the trip home put it looking at the front of my engine.
With my Lehman setup, if I get even a tiny drip leak from anything...it comes to the front of the drip pan and I can see it, if the belt gets loose I can see it, if there is smoke or mist....maybe...so many worries that can start small I might see right away. I do have pretty bright led strip lights in the ER, but the picture is black and white so the IR lights may be in play too (when I open the hatch, it does turn to color.
So whatever camera you feel you can hookup is probably OK, just make sure the field of view will work for where you are mounting it. Going to 1080 resolution may only help if I had a bigger screen.
For screen I had 3 options. My TV, my raymarine mfd or the cheapo backup camera monitor I got from ebay.
I doubt that my cameras would catch many of the problems listed here. With the lights off, I only see a grainy picture illuminated by the camera's IR lights. I would probably catch smoke and a major leak. Nothing else would probably be identifiable.
More light is possibly the answer as well as camera and screen resolution.
My $13 camera sees enough... an oil weep on the side of the engine isn't noticeable, but a drop of oil or fuel into the white gel coat drip pan or onto an oil pad would be.