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CW,
Responses are in line (I don't like to do that but we are getting a little long here. Charlie Morgan wrote: On Mon, 12 Mar 2007 16:40:35 -0400, Matt Colie wrote: CW, (I used to live next door to a boat by that name.) Yes, I know. Your mother was the "dog lady" of Mystic. Right and I still miss her. I fully respect right and desire to disagree, but the facts are that a two ton sloop (that can actually sail) regardless of hull dynamics does not even need the 10Hp to make hull speed in most weather you would actually ever be in and if it is too rough for that, an outboard will be out of the water half the time. Sorry, but my actual experience conflicts with that assertion. My sample is based on experience with a fleet of S2-7.9 hulls 1, 67, 86, 153, 224?, 346, 415 and 505. This has been a serious discussion in the area as the weeds preclude the effective operation of an inboard version. Several of these have been repurposed as cruisers so engine weight is less critical that all around performance. What class/builder is your experience based on? We have have an interesting data point here. Yamaha makes a 25 inch shaft, but it is not available in the standard F series engines. It is only available in the High Thrust motors which are made specifically for propelling sailboats. Actually, I was just at Yamaha's site. The specifications for the HT and STD are very different and unlike Honda they do not give any propeller information. If the page is correct, the 9.9TH is using less displacement and turning the propshaft way slower (2.08 vs 2.92). So, the engine is running faster. Yes, the high thrust version will always produce more thrust, but always at the expense of crankshaft speed at cruise and always at the expense of top speed (again this may not matter as you have achieved hull speed at less than WOT). That additional engine speed must cause additional fuel consumption (just like running in second gear). What?!? The high thrust version propels the boat at hull speed at LOWER RPM's than the standard motors. Significantly lower. For sailboats, what you need is GRUNT. The propeller shaft is turning less fast, but the engine is running faster (trust me - we had a tach on them) and this is just what you want for maximum thrust at zero speed. All the High Thrust engines I have messed with these days are capable of reaching rated engine speed with the boat stationary (tied to a dock in most cases). The standard configuration engines will not get to rated crankshaft speed at zero boat speed. Yamaha apparently does this with gears, Honda does it with a larger D and smaller pitch on the prop with the same gears (this year was different two years ago). My Honda is actually terrible at this, it won't get to within 500RPM of the torque peak and that is still 1k below the the HP peak. I frequently have to go to WOT when maneuvering just to back it off as soon as the boat is actually moving, but I have to be there anyway. It is quieter underway and does burn less fuel than #346 Jus Ducky (but Lee won't tell me how much). This is the same thing that tugboats do - the don't pull fast, they do pull like hell. The big engines don't turn so slowly because they need to to produce the high torque you keep hearing about, they do so because the physics of moving a piston get in the way. That is why the little VW engine that is the same class as your Volvo 2xxx or Yanmar XGM runs up to 4800 or 5200 redline - it is to make horsepower. Their specific torque is about the same as the little marine engines that you know, but they make a good deal more power - only for about 2500 hrs - a Volvo will do twice that. I think you know and understand EXACTLY what I meant, Matt. I was trying to stick to a single category, but the GM 4500 is a truck can come with a 7yard box and is available with the 8.1 that is the current big block. Matt Colie Lifelong Waterman, Licensed Mariner and Pathological sailor Charlie Morgan wrote: On Mon, 12 Mar 2007 10:16:52 -0400, Matt Colie wrote: Shaun, Basically Yes.... Your bet from here. snip Matt Colie CWM Shaun Van Poecke wrote: hi all, snip thanks for any and all info, Shaun |
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