bfloyd4445;126470...what rpm do you run at mostly?[/QUOTE said:1600 to 1800 rpms based on sea state.
bfloyd4445;126470...what rpm do you run at mostly?[/QUOTE said:1600 to 1800 rpms based on sea state.
1600 to 1800 rpms based on sea state.
They also recomend replaceing the transmission oil cooler every two three years and to change the heat exchanger every five years. Do you do that? That should be a question for another thread huh?
UOTE=Floyd;126553]Thanks. The reason for the question was i read at Bomac's website that they recommend cruising be done at 2000 to 2200 rpm which seemed high from what forum posters had indicated.
I'd like to see a torq curve on this engine
They also recommend replacing the transmission oil cooler every two three years and to change the heat exchanger every five years. Do you do that? That should be a question for another thread huh?
>>>Floyd: Pretty much all the routine maintenance we do is based on hours not time. 2000 to 2200 rpms for cruising? What's the link for Bomac that has their recommendations?
>>>
Britt
We cruise mostly at 1750-1850 range. Certainly nothing over 2000 for more than a few minutes to clear things out.
I'm gonna have that done. The boat went on a trip to Catalina Island Sunday and is expected back tueday. The sticker on the oil filter shows it haveing been changed in november of 12. There are detailed records on this boat going back to 1999 and before that it only had one owner which is documented.
A posting in the simgle vs. twins thread got me thinking about the real life of one of these engines. I have a 1975 ford tractor with a similiar engine in it that i drove for 1/4 mile with no oil in it five years ago cause i changed the oil and my neighbor distracted me before i tightened the drain plug and it fell out. I was out brush hogging when i noticed the oil light so i drove back to the farm rthen discovered no plug. Well the tractor runs as good as ever still burns leaks not a drop and no smoke. Its the only tractor i have so it gets quite a bit of use.
I think if the Lehman is built like my tractor it will live a long long time.
Thanks for the information
Britt
In regards to the 1975 Ford tractor incident'
LOL, now that's testament with a bit of "been there, done that" and "how do ya like me now" attitude! I love it!
Thanks Britt!
A slight thread hijack. What's the theory behind opening up the engine to full revs every now and again. My original operating manual notes that at high revs the engine has a tendency to blow blue smoke, unburned diesel.I can't see how that would clear the tubes so to speak. There again I am no mechanic.
Black smoke is unburned diesel fuel blue smoke is motor oil i believe. Anyone know for sure?
That is generally correct although I don't think the black smoke is actually unburned fuel. I think it is the result of poor combustion due to too rich a mixture/too much fuel. So perhaps "poorly burned fuel" is a better discription. Rick B could answer this more accurately.
If it was actually unburned fuel it wouldn't be smoke. It would be fuel.
When an old-generation diesel like the FL120 is started cold, the temperature in the combustion chambers is too low to properly ignite all the fuel that's fed into them. So the unburned fuel goes out the exhaust as just that--- unburned fuel--- and it makes a sheen on the water behind the boat. As you know fuel and oil are like blood--- it doesn't take much to look like a lot. So the sheen can be pretty big back there, particulary in the winter.
Once the combustion cylinder temperatures start coming up the combustion becomes more even and all the fuel injected into the cylinder is ignited. At this point unburned fuel is no longer expelled from the cylinders to go out with the exhaust and the sheen goes away.
That's a whole different deal than black smoke. To my way of thinking you don't get smoke unless you burn something. The fact that the smoke is black means the fuel is getting burned, but not efficiently.
Again, I'm not an expert on this so if I'm off base perhaps someone who is like Rick or Tom (Sunchaser) can correct me.
A slight thread hijack. What's the theory behind opening up the engine to full revs every now and again. My original operating manual notes that at high revs the engine has a tendency to blow blue smoke, unburned diesel.I can't see how that would clear the tubes so to speak. There again I am no mechanic.
Gas or diesel the fuel must be vaporized to burn , it enters the combustion chamber only atomized.
If atomized fuel is subject to combustion , it becomes Buckey Balls.
These, carbon balls float on the surface. of water.