Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#36
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
naive, that is absolutely no such force in nature called "suck", therefore the
exhaust gases can not such the water around the elbow. have you any idea at all how a siphon works?? obviously not. think about it, naive, just what in hell _pushes_ the water "around the elbow"? When the engine is running the exhaust gases do, when the engine is not running, what? It's pretty obvious from that diagram that when the gasses in the exhaust cool they will suck in water 'round the exhaiust loop which will then try to fill the engine... without a siphon break... as I said. Cheers Jeff Morris wrote: "JAXAshby" wrote in message ... jefffies, you are spouting your ill-informed opinion. having the water injection point anywhere near the waterline is forbidden (not to mention stupid) unless there is no other way possible. No, you're wrong as usual. It is a definately forbidden to have the injection point near the waterline with the appropriate protection, such as a siphon break. I even posted the ABYC guideline. Given the geometry of the most commonly used engine (and most others), and taking into account heel angle and an extra margin for overloading, there's less than a foot between the injection and prop shaft. Since one wants to minimize the down angle (15 degrees is the max, but under 8 degrees is better), you'd have to put the engine in the bow to ensure the injection point is always above the waterline. Here's a diagram of the boat in question, a Pearson 30. Its pretty clear to see that even with an extreme angle, the engine is completely below the waterline. A siphon break is obviously required. http://pearsoninfo.net/30/30.htm This is total nonsense. It is quite common, even likely, that the injection point will be at or near the waterline. Even if its nominally above, one must add the result of heeling, and possible overloading. The distance between the injection (with the elbow that raises the injection up) on the new Yanmar YM series is 16 inches above the prop shaft. While this may work out on a newer small, fin keel boat, this will very likely be well below the waterline on a more tradition full keel design where the engine sits deeper. And, if you subtract some for heeling and overloading, its actually hard to imagine a setup (other than very small boat) where the injection point isn't potentially at the waterline. BTW, my boat, and my previous boat, has a siphon break. I was on a 43 foot cruising boat today with a Perkins 4-108 where we determined the injection point was just about at the waterline. Once again, jax proves he knows about as much about boats as the Tidy Bowl Man. "JAXAshby" wrote in message ... oxxy, it is forbidden to have the water injection point below the waterline, except the rare case when it must be. But that rare case was not the boat under discussion. "Jeff Morris" scribbled thusly: You can backpedal and nitpick that the water injection line is not part of the direct path of the exhaust gases, but its pretty clear that everyone considers it part of the exhaust system. You're learning Jeff. This is where Jocks will claim victory. He'll be wrong as usual calling it the raw water system or some such other but hey. that's Jocks. Oz1...of the 3 twins. I welcome you to crackerbox palace,We've been expecting you. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Incredible learning experience | ASA | |||
Along with Chuck's story, here's another one where things went wrong... | General | |||
FAQ: Surviving Usenet: A Guide for the Earnest Newcomer | General |