Great idea..thanks. Very impressed with such good fuel economy. Some of the time was running slow in the ICW and approaches, but probably running close to 2 gallons per hour at cruise speed. I need to check accuracy of tachs, but we were running between 1700-1900 rpm and hitting speeds on GPS of 7.5 to 9.5 mph. Less than $30 day fuel cost for typical cruising.
The Fuel stats below were derived by Sabre in 1991 for publication in the loose leaf bound Users Guide. My 1997 boat (purchased Nov 2018 with 1000 hours) matches these numbers very well, except at the high end, because my boat tops out at 2450 RPMs, which is of great concern. Cummins GURU Tony Athens explains (
www.sbmar.com) why the installed engines MUST reach 2700 RPMs at WOT, if they're to live full lives - over versus under propping is the issue, hence I can't determine if I'm propped correctly.
I've determined that my 2450 limit is due to a set screw limiting throttle travel, rather than the governor setting on the Glendinning synchronizer. Too many people fail to understand the damage they do by warming up or continuously running at low RPMs, rarely if ever running WOT. Some can't afford the fuel burn, others haven't learned how to properly operate & maintain a diesel as taught in
Tony's Tips - Seaboard Marine. I hope to have a mechanic adjust it this summer, since I'm afraid to possibly get involved with tricky Bosch fuel pump adjustments.
Sabreline 34 Fuel Burn w/ twin 6BT5.9Ms
RPM MPH Knots Total-GPH MPG NMPG Est Usable Range
(10% Reserve)
1000 7.1 6.2 2.0 3.57 3.10 802
1250 9.2 8.0 2.9 3.17 2.76 714
1500 11.6 10.1 5.0 2.32 2.02 523
1750 12.5 10.9 7.8 1.61 1.40 362
2000 17.8 15.5 10.8 1.65 1.44 371
2250 22.9 19.9 14.7 1.56 1.35 350
2600 27.6 24.0 19.5 1.42 1.23 318
I have parts and service manuals for the engines if you need info. Meanwhile you can also relish the fact that you don't have timing belts, like Yanmar.