ylop
Well-Known Member
On at least some Volvo engines there is no key. The panel has on switch (which can turn the panel off but not the engine).Does that mean power to the engine control panel but key in off position , or key turned ? Key in the run position is when the hr meter should run rather than when there is live to ignition but off.
If you switch the panel off when engine is not running then engine hours and panel hours are going to be the same. If, like @Daydream believer , you leave panel on so that the engine can be started by simply pressing start (or glow then start) then the OPs question becomes relevant. If the panel is mounted at knee height and various people helm you may not even have a consistent approach.
Whether you use the hours to determine oil changes or at point of sale/purchase to estimate life it would be very misleading to count panel on hours rather than tuning hours, if you regularly use as DDB does. Imagine a boat used for 26 days a year. The skipper sails 0900-1700 each of those days. He is blessed with the weather so only uses the engine for 30 min at start and end of the day. By end of the season his engine has done just 26h of running. Now imagine like DDB (and I am sure many others, for either seaman like or laziness reasons) doesn’t turn the panel off between 0930 and 1630. If his logged hours record all of that: 208h a season, but the records don’t show mid season servicing you might be worried if you come to buy it… so I think the OP’s question is a useful one, even if only to know that the hours number might be nonsense - and therefore it’s of zero value to fix the inevitable lcd display fault.