madoth
New Member
Hello everyone,
we are operating a new 6.4m RIB lifeboat which is powered by two Suzuki DF90A engines. The engine trim (tilt) mechanism can be switched to 'dual trim', so either trim button on the throttles tilts both engines. Unfortunately the two trim motors are powered by two separate battery buses, hence there is no synchronization. (different voltage drops across motors leads to different trim speeds) At the moment the trim needs constant manual adjusting, which is a pain in the backside if operating over a wide speed range, which we often do.
Seeing that most larger lifeboats and RIBs are powered by two engines, I was just wondering if anyone has found a solution to this. (e.g. voltage bridge...)
Suzuki told us this behaviour was normal, which I don't agree with on a boat that cost as the best part of 100k £.
Many thanks,
Matt
we are operating a new 6.4m RIB lifeboat which is powered by two Suzuki DF90A engines. The engine trim (tilt) mechanism can be switched to 'dual trim', so either trim button on the throttles tilts both engines. Unfortunately the two trim motors are powered by two separate battery buses, hence there is no synchronization. (different voltage drops across motors leads to different trim speeds) At the moment the trim needs constant manual adjusting, which is a pain in the backside if operating over a wide speed range, which we often do.
Seeing that most larger lifeboats and RIBs are powered by two engines, I was just wondering if anyone has found a solution to this. (e.g. voltage bridge...)
Suzuki told us this behaviour was normal, which I don't agree with on a boat that cost as the best part of 100k £.
Many thanks,
Matt