My guess is that they are the original engines as approx. 145 hours per year seems fairly typical. I say this based on polls that have been made on TF for annual usage of boats like this. Probably weekend and one short annual vacation for the owners(s) over the years.
John Deere wasn't offering marinized engines in the 70's, 80's, and maybe not till the late 90s.
Ted
John Deere wasn't offering marinized engines in the 70's, 80's, and maybe not till the late 90s.
Ted
The engines are "American Marine", so I guess that American Marine was the marinizer.
American Marine (GB) did the marinization. Internal engine parts are likely available from Deere. Not sure about the transmissions (these were counter rotating engines). Marinization will be hit or miss. Pumps will be easy. Items such as exhaust manifold might be difficult and expensive if you're lucky.The engines are "American Marine", so I guess that American Marine was the marinizer.
I'd contact GB and ask if they have records on that yr & model. A great benefit that GB is still producing boats.
Second, while 7000hrs on a diesel engine aren't necessarily a lot the best way to 'test' the engines is with an oil analysis. There are several companies that you can send a sample to that will give you a full rundown of the health of the engine(s).
Wifey B - those Deeres are on your big boat generators, me thinks…
Nick - these were only marinized by American Marine - Grand Banks. This is now a 50-year old engine. You really need to find a source via the GB owners group. Your points of failure are not the engine, it's the other stuff. Bottom line is there are only a handful of these engines out there. Transmission and marinization are the failure points, not the engine itself. Sometimes there is a source for NOS (new original stock) items that solves all problems. Sometimes there isn't and it can be a serious problem and an ongoing issue/expense. Some of the early Willards were equipped with Unicorn engines that were ultimately replaced not because of the engine but the marinization.
In short, asking about the eninge is the wrong question. The engine is fine and will last a long time as long as the marinization and transmission do not mutiny to kill the engine.
Just my opinion
Peter
For sure its an American Marine manifold.
With the discussion it just occurred to me to ask John Deere themselves.
They now, and for a number of years, do their own marinizations so if the change in policy included that block then J.D. mflds. may be available. It would be worth while asking.
Get the specific engine model number AND the serial number and contact them.
......... A full serial number would be ideal. .............