now now ,do not know meny ppl who would use the minutes
the hrs on the clock do you think that high for the boat its a 1986 moody
has anyone actually timed an "hour" meter - my Yanmar meter takes 55 minutes to record 1 hour
has anyone actually timed an "hour" meter - my Yanmar meter takes 55 minutes to record 1 hour - you would think they could at least get that right!!!!
It may be that the meter was designed for a broader range of purpose. Sometimes jobs are charged - say on a mowing machine - by the time the machine was running. I have seen a meter whose instructions explicitly described this use. While offering a granularity finer than required for engine age and servicing purposes, it could also be handy to note in the log in maritime use - for example when reviewing a previous short trip while planning a new one.What a completely pointless innovation, a minute hand on an hour meter. 2000 hrs on a yacht engine is nothing; the 27 years of servicing, care and maintenance, or lack there of, is key. If it has been looked after you can look forward to using it, on the basis of the annual hours accumulated, for the rest of your natural life; if it hasn't it might well be ready for turning into razor blades.
On the contrary - a little low IMHO around 80hrs per year - not a lot - 1½hrs/weekthe hrs on the clock do you think that high for the boat its a 1986 moody