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Hi Guys, Thanks for all your helpful comments. I see I'm not the only one who's goat this brain cruncher to worry about. As Tony suggested, I would luv to go with twin diesels, but the only units I know of which can be mated to a Sterndrive are the Marine Diesel V8s sold by Performance Parts Technicians (PPT). Not only would their high torque require switching to expensive Bravo drives, but they list for $15K. Not new enough for there to be rebuilds on the market either. So I'm still looking hard, and I mean HARD, at replacement gas engines. It seems smarter to swap the 5.0 Mercruiser 200HP engines for rebuilt 5.7 Mercruisers to get extra torque, running at cruising speed with far less throttle. However, I read a post in another forum from a fellow who swapped his 5.7L for a 5.7 MPI unit and lost performance plus got worse gas mileage. This was apparently due to the higher torque curve in the high horsepower engine. Max torque was only reached at 5000rmp in the 300HP engine, while the old carb engine reached its own Max torque at far lower rpms, giving a bigger kick thanks to its far better midrange torque. I guess what I'll have to do is find the torque curves for each variant of the Mercruiser 5.7 sterndrive I/O engines, and pick the one which has the best low to midrange torque, forgetting what become useless considerations of dual carb, four barrel carb, throttle body or multiport injection. Thanks for advice on what you'd do. Horsepower upgrades just aren't going to cut the mustard, and plopping in 454 Crusaders probably won't help the gallons per hour much in a relatively light 10,000 lb. planing hull cruiser. So it's back to the drawing board now... Rich |
wrote in message ups.com... So I'm still looking hard, and I mean HARD, at replacement gas engines. It seems smarter to swap the 5.0 Mercruiser 200HP engines for rebuilt 5.7 Mercruisers to get extra torque, running at cruising speed with far less throttle. Rich If you must repower the best bet out there IMO is the 383 Chevy. The motor in my truck has over 400 lbs. ft. torque between 2000-4000rpms. And its more fuel efficient than the 5.0 it replaced. Rich |
You might check out some aftermarket performance shops for marine
applications and see if you can find a cam that will give you the most torque and hp at the 3000 rpm mark. I am sure someone makes a cam that is designed for this purpose. -- Tony my boats and cars at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com wrote in message ups.com... Hi Guys, Thanks for all your helpful comments. I see I'm not the only one who's goat this brain cruncher to worry about. As Tony suggested, I would luv to go with twin diesels, but the only units I know of which can be mated to a Sterndrive are the Marine Diesel V8s sold by Performance Parts Technicians (PPT). Not only would their high torque require switching to expensive Bravo drives, but they list for $15K. Not new enough for there to be rebuilds on the market either. So I'm still looking hard, and I mean HARD, at replacement gas engines. It seems smarter to swap the 5.0 Mercruiser 200HP engines for rebuilt 5.7 Mercruisers to get extra torque, running at cruising speed with far less throttle. However, I read a post in another forum from a fellow who swapped his 5.7L for a 5.7 MPI unit and lost performance plus got worse gas mileage. This was apparently due to the higher torque curve in the high horsepower engine. Max torque was only reached at 5000rmp in the 300HP engine, while the old carb engine reached its own Max torque at far lower rpms, giving a bigger kick thanks to its far better midrange torque. I guess what I'll have to do is find the torque curves for each variant of the Mercruiser 5.7 sterndrive I/O engines, and pick the one which has the best low to midrange torque, forgetting what become useless considerations of dual carb, four barrel carb, throttle body or multiport injection. Thanks for advice on what you'd do. Horsepower upgrades just aren't going to cut the mustard, and plopping in 454 Crusaders probably won't help the gallons per hour much in a relatively light 10,000 lb. planing hull cruiser. So it's back to the drawing board now... Rich |
Hi Rich, That 383 Chevy sure sounds great - But even if by miracle it could be mated to a Mercruiser Sterndrive (anyone hear of that?) it would have way too much torque for AlphaOne drives. Thanks, but it looks like I'm back to the drawing board. (the other) Rich |
Hi Tony,
I've checked the google groups for info on 5.0 engines, and apparently the stock cam is already the one which gives the best torque at 3000rpm (please correct me if I'm misguided). So it looks like I'm back to square one - which version of the 5.7 or another sterndrive compatible engine - if anyone has suggestions. Cheers, Rich |
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A 383 Chevy is just a standard 5.7 block, with a 3.75 stroke crankshaft and
special pistons. The 5.0 and 5.7 use a 3.48 stroke. Externally it is identical to the 5.0-5.7. As far as torque goes, yes it is more than an alpha 1 is rated for. But as long as you don't abuse it, it could last for years. In any case, if you increase the power enough to make any real difference on a 5.0 or 5.7, your in the same position. A longer stroke is what is going to give you more torque at usable rpms. A 383 with a nice conservative 211-221 @ .050 cam and 9.6 compression ratio will give you fuel efficiency and you can probably increase prop pitch 4". Check out the combos at http://www.ryanscarpage.50megs.com/combos6.html Combo 45 ought to get it done. Rich wrote in message ps.com... Hi Rich, That 383 Chevy sure sounds great - But even if by miracle it could be mated to a Mercruiser Sterndrive (anyone hear of that?) it would have way too much torque for AlphaOne drives. Thanks, but it looks like I'm back to the drawing board. (the other) Rich |
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