Afraid Knot
Member
Currently looking at a displacement boat with twin Lehman (6 pot) 120hp engines - yes slow and steady does it, but a couple of questions, at 2500 hours are they any good? Are spare parts readily available?
Bit of a drift, here...I'd have thought 2,500hrs wouldn't be considered very much...seven hours per day for one year...less than many ferries/fishing boats must do...
...so, what exactly is the difference between commercial-grade marine diesel engines, and the standard marine variety which yachtsmen are familiar with?
Or, do commercial vessels routinely replace their engines?
in commercial grade everything is heavier, crank webs are thicker, bearing surfaces are larger, castings are thicker especially around the main bearings. bores are often chromium steel liners not cast iron, there will be proper bearings not just a cast iron machined holes, gears not chains, flywheels are often larger to help smooth out cyclic irregularity. Oil filters are bigger as are sumps. The engine is detuned to slog away for years at 1200 - 1800 (ish) rpm but still give good combustion and economy and a very long life. Some were built to be serviced and dismantled while they were running...
I wonder why it is that marine diesels are said to suffer if they're run for long periods at less than their optimum RPM, but automotive diesels are very flexible without apparent problems?