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P.C. Ford July 21st 03 06:16 AM

China Diesels
 
On Sun, 20 Jul 2003 22:04:55 -0700, Le Grande Raoul
wrote:

I do realize that there really is nothing called a 'free lunch' but
wonder if these are any good. Seems the Hardy diesel is a popular
component in a genset for the 'off the grid' crowd. Also seems that
about an equal number of people had good luck with the combination as
had bad luck.


My father used a China Diesel genset at his house in the Cascade
Mountains for several years. I think it was rebuilt once. Crude
engineering-think farm equipment circa 1938. But---it was reliable.




paul martin July 24th 03 08:09 PM

China Diesels
 
Hmmmmm, well. I think a nice slow turning Sabb 10 hp might satisfy his
needs.

http://home.no.net/sabb1/

They are hand-crankable, virtually indistructable, and can often be
found cheap because sailors don't want the terrible horsepower to
weight ratio of slow turning diesels(10 hp is 440lbs, but then 220lbs
is flywheel). The Sabb top rpm is only 1600 and pushes my 16K pound
hull along at 5-6 knots at 1200 rpm. They can sometimes be found in
back lots of boatyards, junk shops, etc. I found one in Marathon,
Florida, that had been literally laying in a guys backyard for two
years. We spirted some oil in the valve cover oiler, stuck the fuel
pump hose in a mason jar of diesel and she cranked on the second try.
Bought it for $300.

Mine is a '78 and if it ever needs parts they are still available.
Actually I did buy a spare raw water pump disphram in '85 but haven't
had to use it yet. And someday I might have to buy a starter motor for
it, but as of now, the mate says she is fine with hand cranking it.

Good luck to your friend and his 'power' boat.

pm

paul martin July 24th 03 08:09 PM

China Diesels
 
Hmmmmm, well. I think a nice slow turning Sabb 10 hp might satisfy his
needs.

http://home.no.net/sabb1/

They are hand-crankable, virtually indistructable, and can often be
found cheap because sailors don't want the terrible horsepower to
weight ratio of slow turning diesels(10 hp is 440lbs, but then 220lbs
is flywheel). The Sabb top rpm is only 1600 and pushes my 16K pound
hull along at 5-6 knots at 1200 rpm. They can sometimes be found in
back lots of boatyards, junk shops, etc. I found one in Marathon,
Florida, that had been literally laying in a guys backyard for two
years. We spirted some oil in the valve cover oiler, stuck the fuel
pump hose in a mason jar of diesel and she cranked on the second try.
Bought it for $300.

Mine is a '78 and if it ever needs parts they are still available.
Actually I did buy a spare raw water pump disphram in '85 but haven't
had to use it yet. And someday I might have to buy a starter motor for
it, but as of now, the mate says she is fine with hand cranking it.

Good luck to your friend and his 'power' boat.

pm


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