Sticky Fingers
Well-Known Member
Might be worth looking at the exhaust components too.
Well I had a few excursions down into the bilge under the engines today to retrieve bits and mop up the spilled coolant from the raw water, tight but doable, I have to watch the hammer loop on my work trousers does not get caught on the drain tap on the port heat exchanger. I can get from the forward bulkhead to the aft one ... must be the diet the wife put me onThe way in was in the centre at the front of the engines. I could lower myself in so I was standing in the bottom of the keel with my head in the saloon then drop down to a crouch and wriggle my head and shoulders aft so I ended up lying in the keel. I am 6’5” and having done it on a hot day to clean up oil under the engines I got stuck and genuinely thought that only the Fire Brigade and an angle grinder would get me out!
I got out by staying calm and ignoring the pain as I manoeuvred my carcass back to a more sensible location and never tried it again!
On a serious note, whilst it is doable size and flexibility are key factors so if in doubt don’t do it!
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Well I had a few excursions down into the bilge under the engines today to retrieve bits and mop up the spilled coolant from the raw water, tight but doable, I have to watch the hammer loop on my work trousers does not get caught on the drain tap on the port heat exchanger. I can get from the forward bulkhead to the aft one ... must be the diet the wife put me on![]()
This is a task for the lady of the house. Or a teenage offspring if you have access to such a thing, doesn’t have to be your own of course.I too have been on diet but if we still had the Ocean I would be looking for someone smaller to send down there!
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I'm 5'8" and it is a bit of a squeeze, my youngest is 6'4" he would not fit at allThis is a task for the lady of the house. Or a teenage offspring if you have access to such a thing, doesn’t have to be your own of course.
Oh, we think it may be the valve stem seals that are leaking oil into the engine, so don't think it is going to get any better.On the smokiness of the engines I think they just are and if you open up be prepared for a veritable cloud behind you for a short time - it tends to clear but if it doesn’t then there is something not quite right.







They can't be 145s. I had 145s in a crown and only ever got 14knots at higher revs than that.Coming back from Hasselt at the start of the month I pushed the throttles a bit further than I had done before, still not full throttle, about 1 1/2" to go before on the stop, took her up to 1900rpm on the upper helm and 2000rpm reading on the lower helm with a speed of 31.67km/h (17.1knots) reading on the GPS which is the fastest we have done on the boat.
Once over 12knots the bow drops and she feels a bit more lively and very steady, could only hold it for a short period as the starboard engine was starting to get hot, plus a barge was turning into the canal in front of us. We were in the highspeed section of the Dessel Kanaal where the speed boats play
This makes me think that either Hunter is over propped or that the engines are not 145hp and could be the 185hp ones fitted. Tomorrow I am going to check the diameter of the propshaft as the 185hp version of the boat had thicker than the 1 1/2" shafts the 145hp engines had. I've tried checking the serial numbers but could find no match on the Perkins site for the engines. Also going to flush the cooling on the starboard engine and see if I can find why it was over heating.
Edit this is the speed/fuel graph I was given for the 145hp engines:
That's what I thought too, I tried looking up the serial numbers of the engines but found no corresponding entry in the list of 6.354 enginesMost Ocean 37s were fitted with the 145hp Perkins. A few, like the one I crewed on years ago, had the more powerful 175hp variant. The 185hp Perkins wasn’t available until after production of the Ocean 37 ceased.
We were against the flow on the canal, but it was only around 1km/h so nothing really, we had to stop for a couple of barges coming south on the Dessel and the high speed section of the canal was just after the bridges where we met the barges.Our Ocean 37 had the 145hp engines and 17 knots was only ever seen at WOT.
I am aware that there is a 185hp variant of the engines but not heard of any fitted to an Ocean. You might find that the remaining throttle movement doesn't actually achieve a lot.
Can’t help with the serial numbers but the first boat I owned (not a Broom/Ocean) had a pair of 6.354s with odd turbos. After a bit of digging I discovered one of the engines was ten years older than the otherThat's what I thought too, I tried looking up the serial numbers of the engines but found no corresponding entry in the list of 6.354 engines
The engines are:
SerNo.Port engine B354U4576HTL
SerNo. Stb engine S354UX445HTL
Port turbo is off to the turbo specialist in Herk-de-Stad it has been leaking oil out the exhaust exit, dismounted it and checked the oil return to the engine and it is clear they quoted €400+vat to renew the seals and rebalance it, they have the parts in stock. The turbo is a Holset 3LD4 where the one on the stb. engine is a 3LD1 2.24

