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Steve March 21st 04 03:36 PM

Fuel injection small block chevy
 
If we are talking about the original VW that came out in the early '80s, the
25 HP limit is probably true.

Been there done that.. That engine is just a converted Rabbit gas engine. I
think I remember that it only produced 40HP as a diesel. I blew-up two of
them in my '82 Vanigon. Never got more than 20,000 out of either engine.
Couldn't handle Calif. Freeway (80mph) speeds for sustained periods (hours).
These engines didn't have a tach but I suspect it was turning about 3k at 80
mph. Hole in the block both times. Too many broken pieces to tell which
broke first.

That VW block as a gas engine was teriffic. I had one in a early Plymouth
Horizon. Best little car I could have had for the price. However at
sustained high speed, the oil wouldn't run back from the head to the sump
fast enough. The valve cover would file with oil and the vacuum hose on the
cover would suck the oil into the air cleaner canister down beside the
engine. About a quart in an hour of sustained speed. I just moderated my
speed and drove the car for another 5 years.

Sorry for dragging this thread OT.

Steve
s/v Good Intentions



Keith Hughes March 21st 04 04:02 PM

Fuel injection small block chevy
 
Steve wrote:
If we are talking about the original VW that came out in the early '80s, the
25 HP limit is probably true.

Been there done that.. That engine is just a converted Rabbit gas engine. I
think I remember that it only produced 40HP as a diesel.


Actually it was 50 hp, naturally aspirated.

I blew-up two of
them in my '82 Vanigon. Never got more than 20,000 out of either engine.
Couldn't handle Calif. Freeway (80mph) speeds for sustained periods (hours).
These engines didn't have a tach but I suspect it was turning about 3k at 80
mph.


Bad guess! Depending on tire size, 80mph in a Diesel Vanagon
(lower final drive ratio than the gas engine models) is about
4600rpm. The engine redline is 4200 rpm.

Hole in the block both times. Too many broken pieces to tell which
broke first.


Cruising long-term at 400+rpm above redline tends to do that :-)

A VW diesel in a sailboat would probably last forever, running
2500rpm, but by the time you 'marinized' it, it would probably be
more expensive (with more weight/hp) than a new marine engine.

Keith Hughes


Terry King March 21st 04 07:49 PM

Fuel injection small block chevy
 

A VW diesel in a sailboat would probably last forever, running
2500rpm, but by the time you 'marinized' it, it would probably be
more expensive (with more weight/hp) than a new marine engine.


Take a look at:
http://www.volkswagen-marine.de/
for the already-marinized VW's
and
http://www.ejbowman.co.uk/products/index.htm
for a supplier of marinizing parts (Exhaust manifolds etc) for VW diesels
and
http://www.lancingmarine.com/dieseliz.html
for a number of diesel conversions, and
http://www.lancingmarine.com/sdieselb.html
(See right columns for two types of VW diesel marine conversion parts).

There are a LOT of boats in Europe, the Eastern Atlantic, and the
Mediterranean, and many of them have smaller diesels.

The US seems to think a Bayliner with raw water cooling is a great
idea...

--
Regards, Terry King ...In The Woods In Vermont

The one who Dies With The Most Parts LOSES!! What do you need?

Pesceuomo March 24th 04 12:52 AM

Fuel injection small block chevy
 
Try to find a Mercruser 320EFI. This engine was offered in the late 80's to
early 90's. All electronics and control modules were mounted on the block.
Instalation should be easy drop-in and wire up. 320 hp out of a Base 350 Chevy
should be a great starting point!

John

FThoma March 24th 04 03:17 AM

Fuel injection small block chevy
 
block chevy
From: Terry King
Date: 3/20/04 9:25 PM Eastern Standard Time
Message-id:

I've 'marinized' a few engines and had many CG inspections. I've never
heard of a "Coast Guard Approved Carburetor". I have read the details of
the flame arrestor specs. etc. The only fuel-overflow protection I've
seen is on some older engines that have a tray below the carburetor at
the manifold-gasket level that has an overboard vent / drain.

If someone can point to more CG-specific regulation I'd appreciate it.

But my next conversion is going to be a VW Diesel anyway...

The only difference besides the flame arrester that I noticed on a boat I
once had was the float bowl vented and overflowed back to the top of the
mecanical fuel pump.


The biggest difference is that the fuel will overflow into the engine if

the
float valve sticks. Or so I've been told.



I don't mean to be argumentative, but I'm still wondering what other
difference there is..




--
Regards, Terry King ...In The Woods In Vermont

The one who Dies With The Most Parts LOSES!! What do you need?


Terry, there is a book called "Small-Block Chevy Marine Performance" by Dennis
Moore that covers small block chevie maring engines, with part numbers, etc.
www.pengulnputnam.com

What are you doing these post IBM days? I'm still cranking on the chips,
myself.

Frank Thoma


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