I want to go at displacement hull speeds of7.5 knots in open water conditions. Physical disabilities dictates that I should have bought a houseboat with an elevator. I think the LRC is a fair compromise.You own the hull at this point, no matter what engine you install it will not change the hull design so the decisions on what engines to put in should be greatly deminished without destroying the boat. you should have made the decision on what “cruise speed” you wanted before buying the boat not choosing engines to replace based off of that. Changing engines will not change a semi displacement hull into a full displacement hull, if you want a full displacement boat go buy one..
The 42 LRC has very good sound deadening,
And if you needed another nail in the DD coffin, the 53's were wet liners. 71's were dry.
Wrong both were dry, 92 series were wet. Wet liners tend to be much easier to replace so no nail in the coffin anyway.
And why is a wet cylinder liner a negative ? You do know that most all heavy duty marine and industrial diesels have wet liners. This feature runs from Detroits, John Deere, Luger, Caterpillar, Gardner, Iveco, EMD, MAN, MAK, Fairbanks Colt, the list continues in several languages. Wet liners provide superior cooling to liner and pistons opposed to dry liners which rely on metal to metal conductive heat transfer. This means with wet liners you can normally do in-frame rebuilding as opposed to block-to-the-shop on dry liners where the block-usually has to be clean up bored for proper liner fit.
Overheated dry liner engines can warp blocks which mean a new engine most of the time. Overheated wet liners can gall or pull metal but a Detroit mechanics can swap them out. It’s true that if the lower O-ring leaks oil it can weep into the crankcase and top o-rings can let coolant into the air box and cause steam in the exhaust and/or blown head gaskets but any operator paying attention should see white exhaust, high temps and greenish looking oil on a dipstick from coolant contamination. But this is certainly not common on standard rated HP non modified engines.
It cost the builder more to make a wet liner engine and the liners are always heavier or thicker. Manufacturing cost is everything these days especially with smaller high speed pleasure boat diesels. Companies like oilfield drilling companies have Detroits running almost all their vessels and they run them very hard. Often they do in frame rebuilds or they just pull new rebuilds from the shop. It’s almost rare to have to replace cranks and often rod and journal bearings aren’t swapped. The Detroits are true modular engines probably the first, so rebuilds have historically always been much easier, cheaper and accomplished in the field or in-frame. If you hot rod these Detroits with performance parts bigger injectors you’ll get more HP but rarely more than about 5K hours. And yes Detroit two cycles weep some oil some worse than others but a lot of this has to do with the way they are run and regimented maintenance.
Rick
All of the above is true.
And the 71 dry liners take mich more skill to correctly install.
With the old liners out and everything cleaned up, you start 'selectively' fitting liners to 'basic' block bore. You start with 3 test liners...a standard outside diameter, a .001 oversize liner, and a .002 oversize.
You begin by test fitting, by hand, each of the 3 sizes in each basic block bore. Going in freely is too loose and will not transfer heat....going in requiring hard palm force, or more, is too tight and will distort liner causing early piston scuff....perfect, is a snug,mushy,draggy, top to bottom uniform feel.
Once discovered, you assign that particular part number/size liner to that cylinder. When finished with all cylinders, you purchase those specific sizes needed for that particular engine.
If a liner fit is found to be too loose, you can still recover.....a .010 oversize outer diameter liner is available....requires machine boring the basic bore .010 oversize....now that cylinder is back in spec.
So....yes, the wet style is much easier, requiring none of this.....just make sure the block liner O-lands are in good, sound shape. We have two 3-53's here now for overhaul....running in small graders.
The comment about semi displacement hull came from me, also a 42 LRC owner. I have a lot of knowledge in yacht design. If a boats speed can exceed an S/L ratio of 1.4 with some bow lift, it is a semi-displacement hull regardless of what the literature says. The S/L ratio is the boats top speed in knots divided by the square root of the water line length in feet. Hargrave designed the 42 LRC and powered the boat to hit almost 10 knots or a S/L ratio of 1.6, squarely within the semi-displacement range.I'll start by introducing myself. My name is Peter and my wife and I own a 1977 Hatteras 42 LRC located in Vancouver, BC. I've been a longtime lurker...Marin likely had only about 9,000 posts when I started on Trawlerforum. I'm not positive if I've even posted before, although I have traded a couple PM's.
We rebuilt both DD 453's a few years back. We run these engines somewhere between 1,750- 1,800 for normal cruising. To correct a previous post on this thread, this is a full displacement hull, not semi (very noticeable in the ride and also Hargrave designer them as such). We are at hull speed at under 1,700 rpm but the engines seem happier at 1,800.
That's just my opinion as an LRC owner
Peter
I have a nice offer with the 6B 120hp... I could keep my BW gear boxes apparently...
Thank ! I told it to the Cummins rep... he is saying that the rebuilt engine will follow the same rotation I have on te gear box... So port propeller will rotate LH and and starboard will rotate RH... Your thought ?
I'll start by introducing myself. My name is Peter and my wife and I own a 1977 Hatteras 42 LRC located in Vancouver, BC. I've been a longtime lurker...Marin likely had only about 9,000 posts when I started on Trawlerforum. I'm not positive if I've even posted before, although I have traded a couple PM's.
We rebuilt both DD 453's a few years back. We run these engines somewhere between 1,750- 1,800 for normal cruising. To correct a previous post on this thread, this is a full displacement hull, not semi (very noticeable in the ride and also Hargrave designer them as such). We are at hull speed at under 1,700 rpm but the engines seem happier at 1,800.
At 1,800 rpm they are not very loud, these are not V653's (spent lots of time listening to one!) Spinning at 2,250. Clearly they are not as quiet as newer engines though, but our rebuilt was simpler and less expensive.
That's just my opinion as an LRC owner
Peter