- Joined
- Oct 1, 2007
- Messages
- 7,332
- Location
- Texas
- Vessel Name
- Floatsome & Jetsome
- Vessel Make
- Meridian 411
15kts@5-6gph...not too shabby!
*Flywright, something doesn't seem to jive here. *I had that same engine in a Prairie 29 with about a 25ft waterline and the engine was happiest about 18-1900 RPMs(6.5kts). *It is a 2600RPM engine. *I think running it at 2300RPMs is a bit much. *Not only that, if I ran mine at *that RPM in that little Prairie it would be doing damn near the same speed as your boat(at least 7.5 and with a lot less waterline). *Are you sure your tachs are correct??? *Are you sure your props are properly pitched? *And what RPM can you attain at WOT?FlyWright wrote:
8 Kts at 2300 RPM seems to be where my Perkins 4.236's are happy. I get 2.1 NMPG at that speed. 7 Kts/2100 RPM gives me closer to 2.5 NMPG and is much quieter, but feels too slow. Call me a speed freak.
Baker wrote:
*Flywright, something doesn't seem to jive here. *I had that same engine in a Prairie 29 with about a 25ft waterline and the engine was happiest about 18-1900 RPMs(6.5kts). *It is a 2600RPM engine. . .
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Off topic, but had an airline pilot here at the house yesterday checking out our P29 before going out to Texas to give your boat a serious look. *(ours isn't for sale, he wanted to check ours out with the wife for room, etc.)
*Kevin, as FF mentioned you need to check with the tranny manufacturer to see if free wheeling the tranny does no damage. My ZF marine tranny's according to the manual are OK to free wheel indefinitely but a quick check with ZF Marine and I was advised to free wheel no more than 30 minutes before swapping engines. So I set a timer on my chartplotter for 20 minutes and swap engines.*ksanders wrote:
*Very cool.
I havn't tried single engine running.
*Kevin--- Whether or not you can run on one with the other prop and transmission freewheeling will depend on two things.* One, your transmission must be capable of being freewheeled with the engine shut off.* Some are, some aren't.* The BW Velvet Drive, for example, can be freewheeled safely according to the manual at slow speeds, which they define as sailing or trolling speeds.ksanders wrote:
I havn't tried single engine running.
*AlFlyWright wrote:
8 Kts at 2300 RPM seems to be where my Perkins 4.236's are happy. I get 2.1 NMPG at that speed. 7 Kts/2100 RPM gives me closer to 2.5 NMPG and is much quieter, but feels too slow. Call me a speed freak.
You could and this has been suggested numerous times on this and other forums including the GB owners forum.* But for whatever reason, nobody ever seems to do it.* I don't know of any twin-engine owner with shaft log cooling who has done this even though they know it can be done.* My guess is that the instances of having to shut an engine down are few and far between, and the fuel savings of running a boat like* GB on one engine with one shut down have been shown to be fairly insignificant.* The founder of the GB forum ran accurate tests of this with his own boat and his findings in table form show that there's not much--- or in some cases anything--- to be gained by running a GB-type boat on one.saturnaisland wrote:
You could cross-cool your stuffing boxes by connecting the two cooling lines with T-junctions, a short cross hose and a few clamps. That way either engine cools both P & S bearings.
*
That rpm range is a little low for Fl120s.* Why not run at 1600, which won't increase your fuel usage enough to care about, get there a wee bit sooner and make your engines quite a bit happier?saturnaisland wrote:*...we are ex-sailors -- which means 1400-1500rpm with twin Lehmans. That speed is probably*not loading the engines as much as it should ...
*
chc wrote:
Our Californian 34 is powered by Detroit 8.2L's @ about 250 hp each. Boat displaces 18,000# officially; practically speaking, I would figure that to be closer to 20 - 21,000#.*
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So if I remember correctly those were about 500 CI and turbo'd.* Is this a later model boat or was this a repower?
I wouldn't be surprised on the weight, my 37' Cali. aft cabin is 15 ton's hanging in the straps with 500 gals. fuel on board.
Larry B
*
*I run my boat(Yanmar 4LHA-STP) at 300 under max continuous and 500 under max rated. *But it is all about power curve. *To give you an idea of the power curve of my engine: it produces 190hp@3100RPM(Max continuous) and 240hp@3300RPM....so as you can see, a LOT of power shows up on the top end meaning the curve is very steep towards the upper end of the RPM range. *I cruise at 2800RPM at approx 140ish hp. *These Yanmars are built to scream and I have no problem running them in this manner. *But like I said, I have owned a 4236 and while I would have no problem running it at 2300RPM, I wouldn't do it on a regular basis. *I would imagine there power profile to very similar to a Lehman and I don't think any Lehman owner would feel to warm and fuzzy about using 2300 as a normal every day power setting.nomadwilly wrote:
John, FlyWright,
If the engine is in excellent shape, if it's warmed up and cooled down at the proper rate, if it's oil and all other maint is fresh and most importantly if the engines are propped right running 300 rpm down from rated rpm should'nt present any problems whatsoever. If Fly is 100 rpm over propped the above is not true at all. With my 3000 rpm rated engine I cruise at 2300 most of the time (700 down) and run frequently at 2500 (500 down) and would'nt hesitate to run 2700 or even 2800 for several hours but to do that all the time even w my "run'em hard attitude" would not be an option. I think you're right John. 2300 (300 down) on an old OR new engine is just a tad too much load for continious operation. If it were my boat I'd run 2000 - 2100rpm and make sure I was under propped a tad or spot on at 2600 at WOT. The above is 100% opinion.
Eric
A lot happened after Marshal sold the Californian name.* I just hadn't seen a GM in a calif.*before, Perkins and Cats were the standard.* That is a lot of pony power, I'll bet it can fly.* I'm the first owner on mine and still running on the original, twin na Perkins, engine build.*chc wrote:
Larry;
Yep, 500 CI w/turbos. Not sure if it was repowered along the way. It is a 1984 boat. I think I am the 3rd owner, so these are very likely the original engines.
*Those are some nice numbers. *It is quite rare you find a boat like that with a single....I would even say extremely rare!!! *And they usually go for cheap because most people looking for that type of boat want twins(and/or speed). *Anyway, I dig your rig!!!Norwester wrote:
Here are some numbers for our 46 Westcoast with a single Cummins 270B.* At 1400 rpm we're at 8 knots burning 2.5 gallons/hr.* At 1600 rpm we're at 9.2 knots burning 3.6 gallons/hr.* At 1800 rpm we're at 10 knots burning 4.8 gallons/hr.* Top end is 2600 rpm.* I generally run at 1400-1600 rpm.* My wife likes to run at 2,000+.* I tell her that past 1800 rpm the boat is pushing more water, burning more fuel and she isn't even gaining 1 knot.* I still catch her inching it up all the time.*
The boat wasn't designed as a trawler, but because of the single it is very efficient for it's size.*
Lyle
*Thanks Peter,Peter B wrote:
Looks nice Jeff. I reckon your best compromise cruise speed would be about 9kn @ 1200rpm, and you'd be saving a bit. In the pic she looks like she is just moving out of her cruise economy comfort zone. Great pic tho - wish I could get one of our boat from a similar vantage point, but they don't exist where we boat. Unless we knew someone with a place on Russell or McLeay Island overlooking one of the channels we frequent, but sadly we don't.