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Graham July 4th 08 07:27 AM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per km)
or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham


Jim July 4th 08 11:29 AM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 

"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham


The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.


Short Wave Sportfishing[_2_] July 4th 08 12:19 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 06:27:42 GMT, "Graham" wrote:

Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per km)
or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?


I'm not sure I understand the question.

If you mean fuel flow meter, that's just a measurement of the fuel
flowing to the engine which translates to gallons per hour (gph).

Has nothing to do with GPS - the functions are all an internal
calculation by firmware which can be displayed in a variety of ways
including miles per gallon based on the gallons per hour data.

Vic Smith July 4th 08 12:38 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 06:27:42 GMT, "Graham" wrote:

Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per km)
or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham


Check this - don't know if it applies to yours.
About halfway down is pic.

http://www.thehulltruth.com/forums/t...tart=1&posts=1

--Vic

Short Wave Sportfishing[_2_] July 4th 08 02:49 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 08:25:15 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, Jim penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats:


"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham


The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.


Au contraire, mon ami!

The Yamaha fuel management gages must receive a fuel flow and GPS (or
speedometer... IMHO,useless) input. You must provide the GPS. I'm not
sure what format(s) of in/output are acceptable, but I suspect it is
configurable to standard formats IOW.... I don't think any special
interface is necessary (since you are likely using the Command Link
interface, already), if the GPS unit outputs a format recognizable to
the FMM..

http://www.yamaha-motor.com/outboard...nk/page05.aspx


No, I think Jim is right.

The link doesn't really give you any information on what data sets are
actually being shared and what format - I would assume NEMA 183.X
which is the defacto standard. The major issue would be connectors on
that harness they supply and how compatiable it is with other units.
However, being NEMA 183 systems, the connector to the hub has to be
something standard - maybe like a N connector or RCA jack.

To the point though, what purpose would having a fuel flow meter do a
calculation based on GPS? The calculation would be simpler and more
efficient to take the fuel flow data in GPH and base the rest of the
calculation on that - position has nothing to do with fuel usage. GPH
has a direct correlation to RPM and MPG - why complicate things?

For instance, if the metering system does the calculations and you
select MPG, then you know if you are using more or less fuel to reach
your destination - X miles equals Y fuel (or the inverse - Y fuel
equals X miles). Same with GPH - X miles equals Y operating time
equals Z available miles.

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.

HK July 4th 08 03:12 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 08:25:15 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, Jim penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats:

"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham
The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.

Au contraire, mon ami!

The Yamaha fuel management gages must receive a fuel flow and GPS (or
speedometer... IMHO,useless) input. You must provide the GPS. I'm not
sure what format(s) of in/output are acceptable, but I suspect it is
configurable to standard formats IOW.... I don't think any special
interface is necessary (since you are likely using the Command Link
interface, already), if the GPS unit outputs a format recognizable to
the FMM..

http://www.yamaha-motor.com/outboard...nk/page05.aspx


No, I think Jim is right.

The link doesn't really give you any information on what data sets are
actually being shared and what format - I would assume NEMA 183.X
which is the defacto standard. The major issue would be connectors on
that harness they supply and how compatiable it is with other units.
However, being NEMA 183 systems, the connector to the hub has to be
something standard - maybe like a N connector or RCA jack.

To the point though, what purpose would having a fuel flow meter do a
calculation based on GPS? The calculation would be simpler and more
efficient to take the fuel flow data in GPH and base the rest of the
calculation on that - position has nothing to do with fuel usage. GPH
has a direct correlation to RPM and MPG - why complicate things?

For instance, if the metering system does the calculations and you
select MPG, then you know if you are using more or less fuel to reach
your destination - X miles equals Y fuel (or the inverse - Y fuel
equals X miles). Same with GPH - X miles equals Y operating time
equals Z available miles.

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.




Well, this has been a fun read so far.

There are *two* different Yamaha gauges available that display fuel usage.

One is a fuel management meter unit. The other is a speed and fuel meter
unit. Interestingly, the "speed sensor" on the engine is incredibly
accurate, at least it is on my boat. It gives just about the same
reading as the GPS at all times that I have noticed.

The fuel management meter shows flow, fuel available, total consumption,
and miles or nautical miles per gallon. Metric read-outs are also
available.

The speed and fuel meter unit does not display the amount of fuel
available. But it does have functions not available on the fuel
management meter.

I have the Command Link Multifunction Meter Installation Manual somewhere.

As always, have a wonderful day.

Short Wave Sportfishing[_2_] July 4th 08 04:00 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 10:12:05 -0400, HK wrote:

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 08:25:15 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, Jim penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats:

"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham
The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.
Au contraire, mon ami!

The Yamaha fuel management gages must receive a fuel flow and GPS (or
speedometer... IMHO,useless) input. You must provide the GPS. I'm not
sure what format(s) of in/output are acceptable, but I suspect it is
configurable to standard formats IOW.... I don't think any special
interface is necessary (since you are likely using the Command Link
interface, already), if the GPS unit outputs a format recognizable to
the FMM..

http://www.yamaha-motor.com/outboard...nk/page05.aspx


No, I think Jim is right.

The link doesn't really give you any information on what data sets are
actually being shared and what format - I would assume NEMA 183.X
which is the defacto standard. The major issue would be connectors on
that harness they supply and how compatiable it is with other units.
However, being NEMA 183 systems, the connector to the hub has to be
something standard - maybe like a N connector or RCA jack.

To the point though, what purpose would having a fuel flow meter do a
calculation based on GPS? The calculation would be simpler and more
efficient to take the fuel flow data in GPH and base the rest of the
calculation on that - position has nothing to do with fuel usage. GPH
has a direct correlation to RPM and MPG - why complicate things?

For instance, if the metering system does the calculations and you
select MPG, then you know if you are using more or less fuel to reach
your destination - X miles equals Y fuel (or the inverse - Y fuel
equals X miles). Same with GPH - X miles equals Y operating time
equals Z available miles.

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.


Well, this has been a fun read so far.

There are *two* different Yamaha gauges available that display fuel usage.

One is a fuel management meter unit. The other is a speed and fuel meter
unit. Interestingly, the "speed sensor" on the engine is incredibly
accurate, at least it is on my boat. It gives just about the same
reading as the GPS at all times that I have noticed.

The fuel management meter shows flow, fuel available, total consumption,
and miles or nautical miles per gallon. Metric read-outs are also
available.

The speed and fuel meter unit does not display the amount of fuel
available. But it does have functions not available on the fuel
management meter.


That's similar to the unit I have with the ETEC.

I have the Command Link Multifunction Meter Installation Manual somewhere.


I'd be curious what the data format is and what version.

Still doens't answer the question though - why bother with hooking a
GPS into the system?

Richard Casady July 4th 08 04:08 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham


The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.


It reports MPH everywhere equally well. It doesn't know sea from land
unless you get it wet. It reports speed over the land and if the land
is flooded, at sea or on a river, there may be an effect from
currents.

Casady

HK July 4th 08 04:16 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 10:12:05 -0400, HK wrote:

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 08:25:15 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, Jim penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats:

"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham
The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.
Au contraire, mon ami!

The Yamaha fuel management gages must receive a fuel flow and GPS (or
speedometer... IMHO,useless) input. You must provide the GPS. I'm not
sure what format(s) of in/output are acceptable, but I suspect it is
configurable to standard formats IOW.... I don't think any special
interface is necessary (since you are likely using the Command Link
interface, already), if the GPS unit outputs a format recognizable to
the FMM..

http://www.yamaha-motor.com/outboard...nk/page05.aspx
No, I think Jim is right.

The link doesn't really give you any information on what data sets are
actually being shared and what format - I would assume NEMA 183.X
which is the defacto standard. The major issue would be connectors on
that harness they supply and how compatiable it is with other units.
However, being NEMA 183 systems, the connector to the hub has to be
something standard - maybe like a N connector or RCA jack.

To the point though, what purpose would having a fuel flow meter do a
calculation based on GPS? The calculation would be simpler and more
efficient to take the fuel flow data in GPH and base the rest of the
calculation on that - position has nothing to do with fuel usage. GPH
has a direct correlation to RPM and MPG - why complicate things?

For instance, if the metering system does the calculations and you
select MPG, then you know if you are using more or less fuel to reach
your destination - X miles equals Y fuel (or the inverse - Y fuel
equals X miles). Same with GPH - X miles equals Y operating time
equals Z available miles.

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.


Well, this has been a fun read so far.

There are *two* different Yamaha gauges available that display fuel usage.

One is a fuel management meter unit. The other is a speed and fuel meter
unit. Interestingly, the "speed sensor" on the engine is incredibly
accurate, at least it is on my boat. It gives just about the same
reading as the GPS at all times that I have noticed.

The fuel management meter shows flow, fuel available, total consumption,
and miles or nautical miles per gallon. Metric read-outs are also
available.

The speed and fuel meter unit does not display the amount of fuel
available. But it does have functions not available on the fuel
management meter.


That's similar to the unit I have with the ETEC.

I have the Command Link Multifunction Meter Installation Manual somewhere.


I'd be curious what the data format is and what version.

Still doens't answer the question though - why bother with hooking a
GPS into the system?



I have no idea why you would want to do that...I do have the "depth"
readout of my Ray depth finder hooked into the GPS, and I have the GPS
set up to show that number -LARGE- on one corner of the GPS display.

I don't give a damn about mpg's on my boat. I pay attention to gph's!
Actually, I don't pay much attention to any of the instruments...other
than the tach and the depth readout. The Bay is a very visual boating
venue, and I am familiar with both shores, so I can always tell just
about where I am. On a reasonably clear day, both shores are visible.


Jim July 4th 08 04:18 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 

"Richard Casady" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham


The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.


It reports MPH everywhere equally well. It doesn't know sea from land
unless you get it wet. It reports speed over the land and if the land
is flooded, at sea or on a river,







THIS IS THE WHOLE POINT. If you are heading against a 5 kt current at 10
kts, what speed will the GPS report?


there may be an effect from
currents.

Casady



HK July 4th 08 04:25 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
Richard Casady wrote:
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, "Jim" wrote:

"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham

The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.


It reports MPH everywhere equally well. It doesn't know sea from land
unless you get it wet. It reports speed over the land and if the land
is flooded, at sea or on a river, there may be an effect from
currents.

Casady



I keep my eye on the water, not on the gauges, unless I'm heading into
shallows, and then I watch out for diminishing depth. If I were
"voyaging" over more complicated waters than Chesapeake Bay, I'd pay
more attention to the electronics, I suppose, but I know the land sights
on both sides from Baltimore down to the mouth of the Potomac, so on a
reasonably clear day, I know where I am in space. This is no great
accomplishment...anyone who pays attention while out on the boat around
here can do the same.



Graham July 4th 08 04:53 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
Thanks for the rapid information Vic and to all the others who have posted
interesting comments here

The gps input helps measure the actual speed made good over the ground which
is needed for calculation of best speed for fuel consumption in litres/km
relative to the ground which is what I'm interested in (ie starting and
ending points of my trips are attached to the earth!)

Graham

"Vic Smith" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 06:27:42 GMT, "Graham" wrote:

Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km)
or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham


Check this - don't know if it applies to yours.
About halfway down is pic.

http://www.thehulltruth.com/forums/t...tart=1&posts=1

--Vic



Vic Smith July 4th 08 05:25 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 11:18:42 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Richard Casady" wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham

The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.


It reports MPH everywhere equally well. It doesn't know sea from land
unless you get it wet. It reports speed over the land and if the land
is flooded, at sea or on a river,







THIS IS THE WHOLE POINT. If you are heading against a 5 kt current at 10
kts, what speed will the GPS report?


there may be an effect from
currents.

Didn't think GPS cared about currents.
If you want to know how fast you're going toward your destination, GPS
can tell you.
If you want to know how fast the water is moving past your speedo
pitot, the boat speedo tells you that - assuming it's working
correctly.
This is what I've heard, anyway.
The graphic (DIP switches) in the link I provided shows the Yamaha
speed sensor can be set to speedo or GPS (NMEA0183.)
Fuel metering DIP can be set for GPH and l/h only.
Looks like no translation to MPG.
All info is good if you make use of it.
So if you assume the boat owner knows his burn per hour (I'd trust
engine rpm more than a fuel flow meter *usually*) and is making a long
run toward a destination, say 100 miles, the GPS speedo is valuable in
calculating whether his fuel will get him there. If it did the
translation and was accurate it would be better.
On some engines a fuel pump/regulator diaphragm can develop a leak and
lose fuel to the intake manifold without real obvious signs. A flow
meter might come in handy for detecting that.
Personally I've found just counting the gallons pumped into the tank
gets me a good enough handle on car mileage. A flow meter seems good
for boats to determine most economical rpm.
From what I've heard the car/boat flowmeters are better at finding the
"best" spot than they are at actually measuring the flow spot exactly.
For instance a guy is reporting he's getting 34 mpg at 65mph on his
car and 31mpg at 75 mph according to his flowmeter.
He's really getting 32 and 29mpg. But the meter does accurately tell
him he's using less fuel at 65mph.
If all or any of the that is wrong let me know.
Your question about a 5kt current and 10kt speed for example.
I think you have to add "apparent" or "true" to the 10kt part to
answer that, but I'm not sure.
Already got a headache.

--Vic

Calif Bill July 4th 08 06:14 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 

"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 10:12:05 -0400, HK wrote:

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 08:25:15 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, Jim penned the following well
considered thoughts to the readers of rec.boats:

"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres
per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham
The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use
those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of
the
water.
Au contraire, mon ami!

The Yamaha fuel management gages must receive a fuel flow and GPS (or
speedometer... IMHO,useless) input. You must provide the GPS. I'm not
sure what format(s) of in/output are acceptable, but I suspect it is
configurable to standard formats IOW.... I don't think any special
interface is necessary (since you are likely using the Command Link
interface, already), if the GPS unit outputs a format recognizable to
the FMM..

http://www.yamaha-motor.com/outboard...nk/page05.aspx

No, I think Jim is right.

The link doesn't really give you any information on what data sets are
actually being shared and what format - I would assume NEMA 183.X
which is the defacto standard. The major issue would be connectors on
that harness they supply and how compatiable it is with other units.
However, being NEMA 183 systems, the connector to the hub has to be
something standard - maybe like a N connector or RCA jack.

To the point though, what purpose would having a fuel flow meter do a
calculation based on GPS? The calculation would be simpler and more
efficient to take the fuel flow data in GPH and base the rest of the
calculation on that - position has nothing to do with fuel usage. GPH
has a direct correlation to RPM and MPG - why complicate things?

For instance, if the metering system does the calculations and you
select MPG, then you know if you are using more or less fuel to reach
your destination - X miles equals Y fuel (or the inverse - Y fuel
equals X miles). Same with GPH - X miles equals Y operating time
equals Z available miles.

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.


Well, this has been a fun read so far.

There are *two* different Yamaha gauges available that display fuel usage.

One is a fuel management meter unit. The other is a speed and fuel meter
unit. Interestingly, the "speed sensor" on the engine is incredibly
accurate, at least it is on my boat. It gives just about the same
reading as the GPS at all times that I have noticed.

The fuel management meter shows flow, fuel available, total consumption,
and miles or nautical miles per gallon. Metric read-outs are also
available.

The speed and fuel meter unit does not display the amount of fuel
available. But it does have functions not available on the fuel
management meter.


That's similar to the unit I have with the ETEC.

I have the Command Link Multifunction Meter Installation Manual somewhere.


I'd be curious what the data format is and what version.

Still doens't answer the question though - why bother with hooking a
GPS into the system?


Speed over ground and speed in water will average out to about the same in a
day of running. Sometimes with the current and others against the current.
And how many people in lakes and ocean are running against large currents
for a long time?



Richard Casady July 4th 08 07:34 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 13:49:02 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.


No, it's just a tool used for management of fuel use.

Casady

Short Wave Sportfishing[_2_] July 4th 08 07:51 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 11:39:02 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

GPH is pretty meaningless when one wants to determine fuel consumed
per distance traveled. Miles per gallon is really what we want to
know, since that is a better measure of fuel economy. (Least fuel
consumed, per mile, is my goal, anyway.)


Please take no offense, but that doesn't make any sense.

You have to have a base calculation which would be gallons per hour
(actually I've been told that the true base is per minute) because
it's the only true way to measure fuel usage.

Thus, you use X fuel over Y time.

So what can be the variable in the equation - RPM. At low RPM,
G(used)PH goes down and when RPM rises, G(used)PH goes up.

Thus, at A revolutions you use X Fuel over Y time.

That cannot change - it's the base calculation.

Now from there, you can make whatever calculation you want - furlongs
per fortnight or miles per gallon - it doesn't matter because it's all
based on GPH. It can't be any other way.

Feed distance, time, and gallons consumed into the computer and out
comes MPG.


That's fine, but it's still the same number as GPH. You have still
used a certain amount of Gallons Per Hour.

You asked a question in another post:

Heading upstream in a 10 MPH current at 8 MPH would give what
sort of MPG???? Sooner or later the fuel tank would overflow...!


That's exactly the point of GPH - you have a known figure.

If your not making headway, you are still using fuel - GPH again.

Short Wave Sportfishing[_2_] July 4th 08 08:00 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 15:53:58 GMT, "Graham" wrote:

Thanks for the rapid information Vic and to all the others who have posted
interesting comments here

The gps input helps measure the actual speed made good over the ground which
is needed for calculation of best speed for fuel consumption in litres/km
relative to the ground which is what I'm interested in (ie starting and
ending points of my trips are attached to the earth!)


I give up. :)

Wayne.B July 4th 08 08:01 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 10:14:30 -0700, "Calif Bill"
wrote:

And how many people in lakes and ocean are running against large currents
for a long time?


Heh, ever been near the Gulf Stream?


Short Wave Sportfishing[_2_] July 4th 08 08:16 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 18:34:18 GMT, (Richard
Casady) wrote:

On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 13:49:02 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.


No, it's just a tool used for management of fuel use.


I've given up trying to understand why. :)

Jim July 4th 08 08:38 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 

"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 11:39:02 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

GPH is pretty meaningless when one wants to determine fuel consumed
per distance traveled. Miles per gallon is really what we want to
know, since that is a better measure of fuel economy. (Least fuel
consumed, per mile, is my goal, anyway.)


Please take no offense, but that doesn't make any sense.

You have to have a base calculation which would be gallons per hour
(actually I've been told that the true base is per minute) because
it's the only true way to measure fuel usage.

Thus, you use X fuel over Y time.

So what can be the variable in the equation - RPM. At low RPM,
G(used)PH goes down and when RPM rises, G(used)PH goes up.

Thus, at A revolutions you use X Fuel over Y time.

That cannot change - it's the base calculation.

Now from there, you can make whatever calculation you want - furlongs
per fortnight or miles per gallon - it doesn't matter because it's all
based on GPH. It can't be any other way.

Feed distance, time, and gallons consumed into the computer and out
comes MPG.


That's fine, but it's still the same number as GPH. You have still
used a certain amount of Gallons Per Hour.

You asked a question in another post:

Heading upstream in a 10 MPH current at 8 MPH would give what
sort of MPG???? Sooner or later the fuel tank would overflow...!


That's exactly the point of GPH - you have a known figure.

If your not making headway, you are still using fuel - GPH again.


There are simply too many variables to calculate MPH over water. You can use
a GPS log of total miles traveled to calculate MPG of a particular trip.
That won't necessarily compare to the same trip on a different day. You can
collect data and come up with averages if you want. That might be useful.
You can reliably chart GPH at given throttle positions and then convert
throttle position to approximate MPH(over water, not land). You and I are on
the same page but the other folks don't buy into what we are saying. No big
deal.


Vic Smith July 4th 08 08:52 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 19:16:46 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 18:34:18 GMT, (Richard
Casady) wrote:

On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 13:49:02 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.


No, it's just a tool used for management of fuel use.


I've given up trying to understand why. :)


Here's what I'm thinking.
You're traveling from A to B at what rpm and pitot speedo say is 20
knots.
The current is going from B to A, at five knots.
You don't have GPS, and are on a compass heading to Grand Cayman.
You didn't know about that current.
The engines start coughing as the fuel runs out.
It's hot as Hades, with not a cloud in sight.
For the first time you notice fins cutting through the water.
You look at the sky again. Damn, what are those vultures doing flying
so far from land?
You try to raise Wayne on the VHF, so he can get a fix on you with his
radar.
No luck. Wayne is taking photos of salt water pigs.
What do you do?
What do you do?
Oh, there's no conductor aboard to ask.
HTH

--Vic

John H.[_4_] July 4th 08 09:19 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 11:18:42 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Richard Casady" wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham

The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of the
water.


It reports MPH everywhere equally well. It doesn't know sea from land
unless you get it wet. It reports speed over the land and if the land
is flooded, at sea or on a river,







THIS IS THE WHOLE POINT. If you are heading against a 5 kt current at 10
kts, what speed will the GPS report?

10 knots. But, without the current, you'd be making 15 knots all else being
equal.

Jim July 4th 08 09:47 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 

"Vic Smith" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 19:16:46 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 18:34:18 GMT, (Richard
Casady) wrote:

On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 13:49:02 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.

No, it's just a tool used for management of fuel use.


I've given up trying to understand why. :)


Here's what I'm thinking.
You're traveling from A to B at what rpm and pitot speedo say is 20
knots.
The current is going from B to A, at five knots.
You don't have GPS, and are on a compass heading to Grand Cayman.
You didn't know about that current.
The engines start coughing as the fuel runs out.
It's hot as Hades, with not a cloud in sight.
For the first time you notice fins cutting through the water.
You look at the sky again. Damn, what are those vultures doing flying
so far from land?
You try to raise Wayne on the VHF, so he can get a fix on you with his
radar.
No luck. Wayne is taking photos of salt water pigs.
What do you do?
What do you do?
Oh, there's no conductor aboard to ask.
HTH

--Vic

Rewind to the beginning.
Plan your trip.
Use the rule of 3 for gas. 1/3 out 1/3 back 1/3 reserve. When you've used
1/3 of your fuel it's time do decide do I go forward or do I go back.
Use a chart or graph similar to what Gene has to get your performance data.
You probably already know your most comfortable and efficient cruise speed.
You can now estimate your trip time. and fuel usage. If you know that you
can refuel at your destination you can safely use 2/3 of your fuel and still
have your 1/3 tank in reserve.
Don't forget to bring human fuel too.
Plan for every situation you can think of. That way when something
unexpected happens you might already have a plan.
What not to plan for?
Don't plan on Wayne being there to save your bacon when you didn't do your
planning.




Short Wave Sportfishing[_2_] July 4th 08 10:05 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 15:26:45 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

Wouldn't it be nice to be able to figure out the most efficient RPM
for covering a given distance? Say, I want to head 30 miles offshore
and use the least amount of that $4.759 liquid gold?

My boat specs, per the Grady site:

2000 RPM 8.5 MPH 3.8 GPH 2.22 MPG
3500 RPM 20.3 MPH 10.9 GPH 1.87 MPG
4000 RPM 27.5 MPH 12.8 GPH 2.16 MPG
4300 RPM 30.7 MPH 14.5 GPH 2.12 MPG
4500 RPM 33.1 MPH 15.7 GPH 2.12 MPG
5000 RPM 37.5 MPH 19.2 GPH 1.96 MPG


Well, I think we've entered tomato/TOMAHTOE stage. :)

I understand your points - they just don't make any sense to me.

Then again, I'm not exactly normal.

Check out that helicopter POH.... same thing there, too.....


Speaking of which, I solo next week and get my "official" license.

WHOO HOO!!!

Tom The Prophet July 4th 08 10:10 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 15:38:21 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 11:39:02 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

GPH is pretty meaningless when one wants to determine fuel consumed
per distance traveled. Miles per gallon is really what we want to
know, since that is a better measure of fuel economy. (Least fuel
consumed, per mile, is my goal, anyway.)


Please take no offense, but that doesn't make any sense.

You have to have a base calculation which would be gallons per hour
(actually I've been told that the true base is per minute) because
it's the only true way to measure fuel usage.

Thus, you use X fuel over Y time.

So what can be the variable in the equation - RPM. At low RPM,
G(used)PH goes down and when RPM rises, G(used)PH goes up.

Thus, at A revolutions you use X Fuel over Y time.

That cannot change - it's the base calculation.

Now from there, you can make whatever calculation you want - furlongs
per fortnight or miles per gallon - it doesn't matter because it's all
based on GPH. It can't be any other way.

Feed distance, time, and gallons consumed into the computer and out
comes MPG.


That's fine, but it's still the same number as GPH. You have still
used a certain amount of Gallons Per Hour.

You asked a question in another post:

Heading upstream in a 10 MPH current at 8 MPH would give what
sort of MPG???? Sooner or later the fuel tank would overflow...!


That's exactly the point of GPH - you have a known figure.

If your not making headway, you are still using fuel - GPH again.


There are simply too many variables to calculate MPH over water. You can use
a GPS log of total miles traveled to calculate MPG of a particular trip.
That won't necessarily compare to the same trip on a different day. You can
collect data and come up with averages if you want. That might be useful.
You can reliably chart GPH at given throttle positions and then convert
throttle position to approximate MPH(over water, not land). You and I are on
the same page but the other folks don't buy into what we are saying. No big
deal.


You've wrapped it up much more clearly that I did. :)

It's actually a tomato/TOMAHTOE thing - I'm comfortable with GPH and
others are comfortable with MPG.

No worries.

Short Wave Sportfishing[_2_] July 4th 08 10:11 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 14:52:22 -0500, Vic Smith
wrote:

On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 19:16:46 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 18:34:18 GMT, (Richard
Casady) wrote:

On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 13:49:02 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:

GPS has nothing to do with fuel usage.

No, it's just a tool used for management of fuel use.


I've given up trying to understand why. :)


Here's what I'm thinking.
You're traveling from A to B at what rpm and pitot speedo say is 20
knots.
The current is going from B to A, at five knots.
You don't have GPS, and are on a compass heading to Grand Cayman.
You didn't know about that current.
The engines start coughing as the fuel runs out.
It's hot as Hades, with not a cloud in sight.
For the first time you notice fins cutting through the water.
You look at the sky again. Damn, what are those vultures doing flying
so far from land?
You try to raise Wayne on the VHF, so he can get a fix on you with his
radar.
No luck. Wayne is taking photos of salt water pigs.
What do you do?
What do you do?
Oh, there's no conductor aboard to ask.


Um....

Ok.... :)

Jim July 4th 08 10:11 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 

"John H." wrote in message
...
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 11:18:42 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Richard Casady" wrote in message
. ..
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres
per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham

The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use
those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of
the
water.

It reports MPH everywhere equally well. It doesn't know sea from land
unless you get it wet. It reports speed over the land and if the land
is flooded, at sea or on a river,







THIS IS THE WHOLE POINT. If you are heading against a 5 kt current at
10
kts, what speed will the GPS report?

10 knots. But, without the current, you'd be making 15 knots all else
being
equal.

Wrongo old bonged one. The GPS sees you doing 5MPH over ground. What matters
on a boat is your speed thru the water. Speed thru the water is determined
by your throttle position which has a relationship to RPM and GPM. These
things are predictable and repeatable. When you want to know ground speed
toward destination you need to take into consideration current and drift.
Same thing in an airplane. There is ground speed and air speed. They're
different.
Sorry you got bonged. I wonder why Harry got less jail time for a more
flagrant rule violation?


Tom The Prophet July 4th 08 10:12 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 16:47:55 -0400, "Jim" wrote:

Don't forget to bring human fuel too.


Cannibalism?

EEEEWWWWWWW......

Vic Smith July 4th 08 10:15 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 16:47:55 -0400, "Jim" wrote:



Rewind to the beginning.
Plan your trip.
Use the rule of 3 for gas. 1/3 out 1/3 back 1/3 reserve. When you've used
1/3 of your fuel it's time do decide do I go forward or do I go back.
Use a chart or graph similar to what Gene has to get your performance data.
You probably already know your most comfortable and efficient cruise speed.
You can now estimate your trip time. and fuel usage. If you know that you
can refuel at your destination you can safely use 2/3 of your fuel and still
have your 1/3 tank in reserve.
Don't forget to bring human fuel too.
Plan for every situation you can think of. That way when something
unexpected happens you might already have a plan.
What not to plan for?
Don't plan on Wayne being there to save your bacon when you didn't do your
planning.

Sounds good (-:

--Vic

Calif Bill July 4th 08 10:46 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 

"Wayne.B" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 10:14:30 -0700, "Calif Bill"
wrote:

And how many people in lakes and ocean are running against large currents
for a long time?


Heh, ever been near the Gulf Stream?


Nope, but returning you got the same current with you.



Calif Bill July 4th 08 10:52 PM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 

"Tom The Prophet" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 15:38:21 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
. ..
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 11:39:02 -0400, Gene Kearns
wrote:

GPH is pretty meaningless when one wants to determine fuel consumed
per distance traveled. Miles per gallon is really what we want to
know, since that is a better measure of fuel economy. (Least fuel
consumed, per mile, is my goal, anyway.)

Please take no offense, but that doesn't make any sense.

You have to have a base calculation which would be gallons per hour
(actually I've been told that the true base is per minute) because
it's the only true way to measure fuel usage.

Thus, you use X fuel over Y time.

So what can be the variable in the equation - RPM. At low RPM,
G(used)PH goes down and when RPM rises, G(used)PH goes up.

Thus, at A revolutions you use X Fuel over Y time.

That cannot change - it's the base calculation.

Now from there, you can make whatever calculation you want - furlongs
per fortnight or miles per gallon - it doesn't matter because it's all
based on GPH. It can't be any other way.

Feed distance, time, and gallons consumed into the computer and out
comes MPG.

That's fine, but it's still the same number as GPH. You have still
used a certain amount of Gallons Per Hour.

You asked a question in another post:

Heading upstream in a 10 MPH current at 8 MPH would give what
sort of MPG???? Sooner or later the fuel tank would overflow...!

That's exactly the point of GPH - you have a known figure.

If your not making headway, you are still using fuel - GPH again.


There are simply too many variables to calculate MPH over water. You can
use
a GPS log of total miles traveled to calculate MPG of a particular trip.
That won't necessarily compare to the same trip on a different day. You
can
collect data and come up with averages if you want. That might be useful.
You can reliably chart GPH at given throttle positions and then convert
throttle position to approximate MPH(over water, not land). You and I are
on
the same page but the other folks don't buy into what we are saying. No
big
deal.


You've wrapped it up much more clearly that I did. :)

It's actually a tomato/TOMAHTOE thing - I'm comfortable with GPH and
others are comfortable with MPG.

No worries.


I need an average MPG, as if you are running to an upriver or offshore
point, it would be nice to know if you have enough fuel capacity. I could
slow down and get a little better mileage, or go faster for fun.



John H.[_4_] July 5th 08 02:03 AM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 17:11:39 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"John H." wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 11:18:42 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Richard Casady" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres
per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?

Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?

Thanks, Graham

The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use
those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of
the
water.

It reports MPH everywhere equally well. It doesn't know sea from land
unless you get it wet. It reports speed over the land and if the land
is flooded, at sea or on a river,






THIS IS THE WHOLE POINT. If you are heading against a 5 kt current at
10
kts, what speed will the GPS report?

10 knots. But, without the current, you'd be making 15 knots all else
being
equal.

Wrongo old bonged one. The GPS sees you doing 5MPH over ground. What matters
on a boat is your speed thru the water. Speed thru the water is determined
by your throttle position which has a relationship to RPM and GPM. These
things are predictable and repeatable. When you want to know ground speed
toward destination you need to take into consideration current and drift.
Same thing in an airplane. There is ground speed and air speed. They're
different.
Sorry you got bonged. I wonder why Harry got less jail time for a more
flagrant rule violation?


No. You assumed the 10 knots was the speed over water, I assumed the 10
knots was the speed over ground.

No problem with the bonged bit, and since I didn't see Harry's stuff, I
can't comment. Chuck and I have been having a running discussion about 'the
threesome' and their behavior. Apparently he's decided that discussion and
criticism of his rules is against his rules. And, that's OK. I wish he'd
said so up front.

John H.[_4_] July 5th 08 02:04 AM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 21:12:17 GMT, Tom The Prophet
wrote:

On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 16:47:55 -0400, "Jim" wrote:

Don't forget to bring human fuel too.


Cannibalism?

EEEEWWWWWWW......


He said 'human fuel', not 'human, human fuel'. There's a subtle difference.

HK July 5th 08 02:05 AM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
John H. wrote:

Chuck and I have been having a running discussion about 'the
threesome' and their behavior.


Uh-huh. I can only imagine the "discussion" Chuck has been having with
you. He must be holding his nose, because, when it gets down to brass
tacks, you stink.


(nicely mixed metaphor, hey?)

JimH[_2_] July 5th 08 02:09 AM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Jul 4, 5:11*pm, "Jim" wrote:
"John H." wrote in message

...

On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 11:18:42 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Richard Casady" wrote in message
. ..
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres
per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?


Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?


Thanks, Graham


The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use
those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of
the
water.


It reports MPH everywhere equally well. It doesn't know sea from land
unless you get it wet. It reports speed over the land and if the land
is flooded, at sea or on a river,


* *THIS IS THE WHOLE POINT. If you are heading against a 5 kt current at
10
kts, what speed will the GPS report?


10 knots. But, without the current, you'd be making 15 knots all else
being
equal.


Wrongo old bonged one. The GPS sees you doing 5MPH over ground. What matters
on a boat is your speed thru the water. Speed thru the water is determined
by your throttle position which has a relationship to RPM and GPM. These
things are predictable and repeatable. When you want to know ground speed
toward destination you need to take into consideration current and drift.
Same thing in an airplane. There is ground speed and air speed. They're
different.
Sorry you got bonged. I wonder why Harry got less jail time for a more
flagrant rule violation?


http://www.tradebit.com/filedetail.p...19-Sounds-MIDI

JimH[_2_] July 5th 08 02:10 AM

Yamaha Fuel Management Gauges
 
On Jul 4, 9:03*pm, John H. wrote:
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 17:11:39 -0400, "Jim" wrote:

"John H." wrote in message
.. .
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 11:18:42 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Richard Casady" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 4 Jul 2008 06:29:26 -0400, "Jim" wrote:


"Graham" wrote in message
news:ypjbk.54744$Jx.31786@pd7urf1no...
Does anyone know if these gauges display miles per gallon (or litres
per
km) or just miles travelled and gallons consumed?


Do they need any special interface to work with standard GPS's like a
Raytheon chart plotter?


Thanks, Graham


The GPS reports miles per hour over land. It would be useless to use
those
calculations in determining real miles per gallon over the surface of
the
water.


It reports MPH everywhere equally well. It doesn't know sea from land
unless you get it wet. It reports speed over the land and if the land
is flooded, at sea or on a river,


* *THIS IS THE WHOLE POINT. If you are heading against a 5 kt current at
10
kts, what speed will the GPS report?


10 knots. But, without the current, you'd be making 15 knots all else
being
equal.

Wrongo old bonged one. The GPS sees you doing 5MPH over ground. What matters
on a boat is your speed thru the water. Speed thru the water is determined
by your throttle position which has a relationship to RPM and GPM. These
things are predictable and repeatable. When you want to know ground speed
toward destination you need to take into consideration current and drift..
Same thing in an airplane. There is ground speed and air speed. They're
different.
Sorry you got bonged. I wonder why Harry got less jail time for a more
flagrant rule violation?


No. You assumed the 10 knots was the speed over water, I assumed the 10
knots was the speed over ground.

No problem with the bonged bit, and since I didn't see Harry's stuff, I
can't comment. Chuck and I have been having a running discussion about 'the
threesome' and their behavior. Apparently he's decided that discussion and
criticism of his rules is against his rules. And, that's OK. I wish he'd
said so up front.


http://www.tradebit.com/filedetail.p...19-Sounds-MIDI


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