- Joined
- Oct 1, 2007
- Messages
- 7,332
- Location
- Texas
- Vessel Name
- Floatsome & Jetsome
- Vessel Make
- Meridian 411
Interesting premise there Baker; the way you stated it anyway. "A truck gets up to speed and then the load decreases significantly." By "load"... You do mean the load of hp. required for accelerating the inertia of a truck's dead weight... correct? Once up to speed the truck engine has to overcome other uniquely variable loads [such as tread designs, tire pressures, winds, bearing designs] than before due to natural airflow blockage or assistance and faster tire rotations and more bearing/grease rotations/frictions.
Therefore, although considerably different in many respects/aspects of friction and natural property blockage/assistance during acceleration and after attaining cruise speed, the overcoming inertia "load" during acceleration for a boat engine also decreases significantly once hitting cruising speed... correct? That is of course depending on speed reached, how quickly speed is reached and what design hull is riding in what manner either in or over the water.
Of course each "load" factor for land or water craft, of accelerating weight and then maintaining speed, has included in its formula just how fast to accelerate to reach and maintain a desired speed.
https://www.google.com/imgres?imgur...ved=0ahUKEwiC0KWwpL7XAhUr6YMKHeNWBn0Q9QEIKjAA
In my example, I was assuming the engine is properly sized for the mission. Look at my engines. That is a planing boat. I run it on plane. I am running it at about 75% power at normal cruise. That 75% power is constant at cruise. Many people on here run at displacement speeds with larger engines. Then yes, there may be some "coast" after reaching cruise speed. But then again, it is only because an excess of power. Take Eric's little boat with his 50hp engine. He is likely running close to 60-70% power at 6 knots. And that power is constant at that speed. TO put it very simply, water is 10 times more dense than air. And if your boat engine is properly sized for the mission, it will likely be doing a constant 60-70% power at cruise.
I do have a friend that just bought a Selene 53(lucky bastard) with a Cummins 6CTA at 450hp. That boat is overpowered IMO. But it already has 6000 hours on it and a very complete log/history that shows it will likely go at least another 6000 and probably more. And the reason is that it is barely working. Just a WAG but I would say it is probably around 30% at 8 knots. That engine in a boat like Ski's(which he does have that same engine) that is run up on plane all the time is about a 5000 hour engine assuming all the other failure prone stuff doesn't kill it.
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