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#1
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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If you are familiar with the Universal Atomic 4 gas engine, you know that it
originally used raw water as the cooling system. Moyer Marine, and Indiga Electronics both sell a Heat Exchanger which can be mounted near the engine, therefore eliminating the raw water as the cooling system and using antifreeze as the coolant. The Heat Exchanger units cost around $500 dollars. I got to wondering ??? Can I or is there ,,, a place where I can buy a Heat Exchanger that will work with the Atomic 4 but isn't so expensive? Do motor boats use this Heat Exchange method? It just seems like $500 dollars is expensive.. Any thoughts? |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Tue, 14 Mar 2006 23:53:36 GMT, "Thomas Wentworth"
wrote: Do motor boats use this Heat Exchange method? It just seems like $500 dollars is expensive.. Any thoughts? ================ Yes, I do. It's only half a boat buck. If that seems expensive, then you don't appreciate the realities of trying to manufacture and market specialized, low volume equipment. I doubt that anyone is getting rich selling this stuff. With all due respect, if $500 seems expensive to you, then you should reconsider getting a mid size cruising sail boat. You want to be in a position where you own the boat and not the other way around. Seriously, $500 is the tip of the iceberg. |
#3
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"Thomas Wentworth" wrote
It just seems like $500 dollars is expensive.. Any thoughts? I'm always good for a thought. $500 isn't expensive. That's just about one BBU for a reasonably complex piece of gear that isn't produced in quantity. What's a BBU? Oh, I though everyone knew. That's a "Basic Boat Unit". For rough estimating of any boat project, just count up everything you need and figure each item costs $500. Total cost should then average out close to the same price. You can pump the water through the heat exchanger with the raw water pump but then you'll still need: A second pump to pump cooling water to the exhaust. Bracket fabricated to hold second pump. Belt and pulleys adapted. Heater tank Piping, hose, and clamps. Header tank. Thermostat Let's see, that's seven more BBU's. I'd like to get my raw water cooled boat set up so I can use it conveniently in freezing weather. Being from the commercial world, I'm getting a proposal on a keel cooler. This is heresy for a sail boat but the fact of the matter is that the drag is pretty minimal. The boundary layer is so thick in the hind quarters that I'll never notice the effect of dragging this small radiator like device through the water. With a heat exchanger, you still have seawater in the boat that can freeze and bust things, (like the heat exchanger) so you still have to worry about draining or filling the system raw water side with antifreeze. With the keel cooler, instead of bringing the salt cooling water in, you just pump the antifreeze and fresh water mix outside and let the ocean cool it. You still have to worry about draining the muffler but, if you should forget and crack a Vernalift, it's not as big a hit to the pocketbook as an engine block or heat exchanger. The ideal thing is to convert to dry exhaust but then you need a muffler and it's a lot of hot insulated pipe to arrange for in most sailboats. Water backing up into the hot exhaust pipe is also likely to crack it. That's why most commercial boats that work all year have stacks and keel coolers. No salt water in the boat and no salt water pumps. -- Roger Long |
#4
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Roger ,, couldn't you set up a fan unit to take the heat out of the engine
coolant in the winter? Like a radiator in a car? Then, you could have a warm boat. This seems extreme though. Are you this hard core? ========= "Roger Long" wrote in message ... "Thomas Wentworth" wrote It just seems like $500 dollars is expensive.. Any thoughts? I'm always good for a thought. $500 isn't expensive. That's just about one BBU for a reasonably complex piece of gear that isn't produced in quantity. What's a BBU? Oh, I though everyone knew. That's a "Basic Boat Unit". For rough estimating of any boat project, just count up everything you need and figure each item costs $500. Total cost should then average out close to the same price. You can pump the water through the heat exchanger with the raw water pump but then you'll still need: A second pump to pump cooling water to the exhaust. Bracket fabricated to hold second pump. Belt and pulleys adapted. Heater tank Piping, hose, and clamps. Header tank. Thermostat Let's see, that's seven more BBU's. I'd like to get my raw water cooled boat set up so I can use it conveniently in freezing weather. Being from the commercial world, I'm getting a proposal on a keel cooler. This is heresy for a sail boat but the fact of the matter is that the drag is pretty minimal. The boundary layer is so thick in the hind quarters that I'll never notice the effect of dragging this small radiator like device through the water. With a heat exchanger, you still have seawater in the boat that can freeze and bust things, (like the heat exchanger) so you still have to worry about draining or filling the system raw water side with antifreeze. With the keel cooler, instead of bringing the salt cooling water in, you just pump the antifreeze and fresh water mix outside and let the ocean cool it. You still have to worry about draining the muffler but, if you should forget and crack a Vernalift, it's not as big a hit to the pocketbook as an engine block or heat exchanger. The ideal thing is to convert to dry exhaust but then you need a muffler and it's a lot of hot insulated pipe to arrange for in most sailboats. Water backing up into the hot exhaust pipe is also likely to crack it. That's why most commercial boats that work all year have stacks and keel coolers. No salt water in the boat and no salt water pumps. -- Roger Long |
#5
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Not with 20 HP. That little engine takes all day to heat up the two
gallon galley hot water tank which the cooling water runs through before going into the exhaust. One reason I want a keel cooler is that I can use the thermostat to boost the operating temperature of the engine. The engine will run better and I'll have more hot water. What I do is plug in the shore power and heat up the hot water just before leaving. AC brings it up to temp in about 5 minutes. The engine then keeps it there if I'm doing some motoring. And, yeah, I'm pretty hard core ![]() -- Roger Long "Thomas Wentworth" wrote in message news ![]() Roger ,, couldn't you set up a fan unit to take the heat out of the engine coolant in the winter? Like a radiator in a car? Then, you could have a warm boat. This seems extreme though. Are you this hard core? ========= "Roger Long" wrote in message ... "Thomas Wentworth" wrote It just seems like $500 dollars is expensive.. Any thoughts? I'm always good for a thought. $500 isn't expensive. That's just about one BBU for a reasonably complex piece of gear that isn't produced in quantity. What's a BBU? Oh, I though everyone knew. That's a "Basic Boat Unit". For rough estimating of any boat project, just count up everything you need and figure each item costs $500. Total cost should then average out close to the same price. You can pump the water through the heat exchanger with the raw water pump but then you'll still need: A second pump to pump cooling water to the exhaust. Bracket fabricated to hold second pump. Belt and pulleys adapted. Heater tank Piping, hose, and clamps. Header tank. Thermostat Let's see, that's seven more BBU's. I'd like to get my raw water cooled boat set up so I can use it conveniently in freezing weather. Being from the commercial world, I'm getting a proposal on a keel cooler. This is heresy for a sail boat but the fact of the matter is that the drag is pretty minimal. The boundary layer is so thick in the hind quarters that I'll never notice the effect of dragging this small radiator like device through the water. With a heat exchanger, you still have seawater in the boat that can freeze and bust things, (like the heat exchanger) so you still have to worry about draining or filling the system raw water side with antifreeze. With the keel cooler, instead of bringing the salt cooling water in, you just pump the antifreeze and fresh water mix outside and let the ocean cool it. You still have to worry about draining the muffler but, if you should forget and crack a Vernalift, it's not as big a hit to the pocketbook as an engine block or heat exchanger. The ideal thing is to convert to dry exhaust but then you need a muffler and it's a lot of hot insulated pipe to arrange for in most sailboats. Water backing up into the hot exhaust pipe is also likely to crack it. That's why most commercial boats that work all year have stacks and keel coolers. No salt water in the boat and no salt water pumps. -- Roger Long |
#6
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![]() Roger Long wrote: Not with 20 HP. That little engine takes all day to heat up the two gallon galley hot water tank which the cooling water runs through before going into the exhaust. 2 gallon water heater? What unit is that? I've pulled my rusty old Raritan 6 gal out, and would like a much smaller unit. Jack |
#7
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2 gallons was a wild guess but I looked it up and it's either a 4 or 6
Atlantic Marine Products Corp. I would guess 4 gallons because it isn't very big. I don't know it they still make them. Phone number in Richmond VA was 804-264-1169 in 1997. -- Roger Long wrote in message ups.com... Roger Long wrote: Not with 20 HP. That little engine takes all day to heat up the two gallon galley hot water tank which the cooling water runs through before going into the exhaust. 2 gallon water heater? What unit is that? I've pulled my rusty old Raritan 6 gal out, and would like a much smaller unit. Jack |
#8
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Thanks, Roger, I'll check them out.
Jack |
#9
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![]() "Thomas Wentworth" wrote in message news ![]() Roger ,, couldn't you set up a fan unit to take the heat out of the engine coolant in the winter? Like a radiator in a car? Then, you could have a warm boat. This seems extreme though. Are you this hard core? I have a friend with this exact setup in a Viking 33 with a fresh water cooled Atomic 4. No water heater though. He gets heat quickly and it is effective for keeping the boat warm while the engine is running. -- Ken Heaton & Anne Tobin Cape Breton Island, Canada kenheaton at eastlink dot ca |
#10
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On Sun, 19 Mar 2006 13:32:45 GMT, "Ken Heaton"
wrote: "Thomas Wentworth" wrote in message news ![]() Roger ,, couldn't you set up a fan unit to take the heat out of the engine coolant in the winter? Like a radiator in a car? Then, you could have a warm boat. This seems extreme though. Are you this hard core? I have a friend with this exact setup in a Viking 33 with a fresh water cooled Atomic 4. No water heater though. He gets heat quickly and it is effective for keeping the boat warm while the engine is running. As I have a Viking 33 with an Atomic 4, I'd be interested in how this is set up in a way that doesn't counteract the blower venting the engine compartment. I don't have chronic crankcase fumes as it's a freshly rebuilt engine, but if I'm on a downwind motorsail, I do smell it a bit in the cabin. In other words, how do you leach off the heat without the fumes? R. |
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