David Hiley
New Member
Thankyou for your time and effort Scottie. I'll keep on researching.
it’s a strange one and difficult to establish what the various lumps and bumps are for are there springs under the brass caps and hoe is gear selection doneThankyou for your time and effort Scottie. I'll keep on researching.
Yes I have been in touch with Lancing Marine, who unlike Thorneycroft , have been very helpful. I'm also up against the fact that I believe that Parsons etal had stopped making mechanical boxes before the 4/98 came into existence.Hello Ben. Thanks for the info. Were your 4/98's automotive or industrial. That's where whoever did this insurance job screwed up. They thought yippie we'll stick this 4/98 in here then found the back of the block was different and bodgied it up. My engine has come out of a tractor or something and has substantial bolts holding the box to the block. There is no separate bellhousing on a tractor as far as I can ascertain. The gearbox bellhousing being cast in one piece and becoming, for all intents and pruposes, a structural part of the machine.
David - just out of hospital ok - I think your old box had the input gear bolted to the end of the crank with the flywheel running in oil - time to forget those boxes, paint flowers on it !.Head in the same direction as Burgunyben - the bellhousing I have is SAE5 & probably as his engines.Your existing drop down reduction puts shaft lower than crank so a drop down PRM 160 will be fine & if that is what Ben has you are in clover. Tractor engines based on vehicle engine often had heavier flywheels so there maybe a bit of work to do there.Yes I have been in touch with Lancing Marine, who unlike Thorneycroft , have been very helpful. I'm also up against the fact that I believe that Parsons etal had stopped making mechanical boxes before the 4/98 came into existence.
Quite right on the bell housing/tractor front. I use a 1976 Leyland tractor with that engine to launch and retrieve my boat. As you say, the engine and gearbox are effectively the chassis and load bearing and as such the gearbox and bell housing all one piece. One thing I would add is that the cylinder liners needed regular replacing in the tractors. New rings and liners was a regular task. They worked hard and did far more hours than a boat engine - 500-1000 a year - but maybe worth a look whilst it is stripped down.Hello Ben. Thanks for the info. Were your 4/98's automotive or industrial. That's where whoever did this insurance job screwed up. They thought yippie we'll stick this 4/98 in here then found the back of the block was different and bodgied it up. My engine has come out of a tractor or something and has substantial bolts holding the box to the block. There is no separate bellhousing on a tractor as far as I can ascertain. The gearbox bellhousing being cast in one piece and becoming, for all intents and pruposes, a structural part of the machine.
Thanks. I had heard about the liners being a potential issue and was advised to use fleetguard inhibitor ( by Cummins I believe) to minimise this.Quite right on the bell housing/tractor front. I use a 1976 Leyland tractor with that engine to launch and retrieve my boat. As you say, the engine and gearbox are effectively the chassis and load bearing and as such the gearbox and bell housing all one piece. One thing I would add is that the cylinder liners needed regular replacing in the tractors. New rings and liners was a regular task. They worked hard and did far more hours than a boat engine - 500-1000 a year - but maybe worth a look whilst it is stripped down.
Ron Greet Tractors near Totnes in South Devon is a great source of old and vintage tractor parts, new and S/H, and extremely helpful if you are after engine parts that are Leyland standard bits.
Good luck with it all
Could we have pictures of both sides of engine please not too closeHi Jim. Glad to hear your home and doing ok. Image shown is of back plate with startermotor installed. Drop down on original box was 4" so, as you say, prm would fit the bill nicely. Minor differences could be accomodated by going from solid to flexible mounts. Prm will be approximately 12" shorter, which will require some messing about.Pity to lose original box. Although only 60years old the boat is so well built it will last another 60, after I've finished giving her a refurb, and at some stage she will be a classic and somebody will probably want to put her back to absolute original. Mechanical boxes will by then probably only be in museums.
Flywheel is 16" diameter and doesn't appear to be the heavier one one would expect to find on a tractor. But bearing in mind the standard of engineering carried out anything could have happened in that regard.