Wayne, with a new build boat with an engine that doesn't comply with current emissions standards, how does that restrict your movements, if at all? And how does it restrict where the boat can be registered?
Wayne, with a new build boat with an engine that doesn't comply with current emissions standards, how does that restrict your movements, if at all? And how does it restrict where the boat can be registered?
Hi Peter. Things have been a wee bit hectic on my end lately so my apologies for taking so long to get to your question which I did see that you posted in previous thread as well.
I get the questions you ask from many others and not sure that I'm ever able to provide a definitive answer with any certainty, nor am I any expert on the rules and regulations for registration in other jurisdictions, so best I can do is share the following brief summary of my experience to date with having a Gardner 6LXB in our new build and having our boat fully registered in Canada and now in Jersey/UK.
As soon as we first considered the idea of using a Gardner engine in our boat, I did my best to extensively research the same question of whether it was possible to build a new boat with this engine. It was difficult to get a definitive answer given the specifics of the boat we were designing and about to build but also did not find anything definitive that said this was not possible so we proceeded.
I spent most days for several years in the boat yard of our builder as well as extended time in the yards of several of the other boat builders such as Damen and Alia who were also in the Antalya Free Zone in Turkey which gave me the chance to pursue this critical question with a wide range of officials and inspectors and I'm happy to share what I learned from all of them. Our builder was ISO 900x certified and all boats they were building had meet CE standards and so there were multiple inspections throughout the build and prior to launch of our boat. On multiple occasions I’ve had these various inspectors be very intrigued by our Gardner engine and spent an hour or more peppering me with questions about it in the engine room but never any questions about it meeting their requirements.
Based on my conversations on this topic with several registration officials in Canada, USA, UK and several certification inspectors at MCA, Bureau Veritas and CE, some of the specifications of our engine seem to allow it to meet with their approval. For example the marine version of the 6LXB is rated at 127HP/95kW and I've been told that engines under 100kW are exempt. Also, while these LXB engines were originally manufactured in 1970-90 (ours in 1978), when they are fully rebuilt and the only original parts are things like cast engine block, heads, etc. and all others are newly manufactured, the engine year is registered as the year of the new build, not the original date of manufacture.
Another factor which may play a role in this question is that our boat is a one off custom build not a production boat. Several other boats are now being built which are based on our design but with significant changes such that each of them are also custom one off designs and builds.
We were initially going to register the boat in my home country of Canada, and we went through the whole process and had that all approved and the boat registered there. Later, just before launch, we changed the registration to Jersey due mostly to insurance companies being unwilling to write a policy for any boat registered in the USA or Canada. So I can confirm that the boat met all the requirements to be fully registered in both these countries which have quite different rules and regulations. In both cases full details and specifications for the boat including the engine were required and submitted, along with the inspection reports from Bureau Veritas in our case. The registration was approved and official registration papers sent to us which we have been using ever since.
Same story with our insurance, all information and forms provided including engine details listed on the policy and no questions asked.
As to your question about restrictions to our movements to other countries, I’m not aware of any and can only tell you what I know from our limited experiences so far. To date we have only had taken the boat in/out of Turkey and the EU but in each of those check in/out procedures where engine details were provided via both the boat's registration and the check in/out forms for each country, there has never been any questioning of the engine or anything else with the boat.
Perhaps things would have been different if we had tried to register the boat in the USA? Perhaps we will run into difficulties bringing the boat into other countries as we cruise the world? I guess we will find out as we travel. Our intention is that for as long as our good health continues, we will continue to travel the world in our new boat and to experience all the differences between voyaging under power rather than under sail which is mostly all our previous experiences. We don’t have any “home base” so no intent to stay in any one country for any amount of time beyond that any foreign flagged boat is allowed.
Overall and just my personal perspective, I think this is most often a question for builders of production boats. Were we to have asked the likes of Nordhavn or Flemming or any other such production builders, to put a Gardner engine in a boat we wanted them to build for us, their answer would have course been sorry we can’t do that. But during our world wide search to find the best builder for us, I met with builders in New Zealand, Canada, USA, Turkey, Tunisia and the Netherlands. I had extensive detailed discussions and meetings with all of them about building our boat for which we had very detailed design and specifications including the Gardner engine, and all of them were glad to take on our build and sent us quotes.
My other curiosity I guess is that outside of boat builders meeting the requirements for the boats they build and during initial registration of a new boat, I’m not sure where or how this comes up for us boat owners? Between Christine and myself we have owned and been captaining boats of all kinds in most parts of the world for several decades now including the USA and we can’t recall any situation when checking in/out of a country or on the relatively rare boarding for inspection by Coast Guard or other officials where this question has ever come up.
Hope this helps answer your questions Peter and happy to answer any more you may have as best I can.
-Wayne