ghostlymoron
Well-Known Member
How easy would it be to fit an inboard engine in a Hurley 22?
How easy would it be to fit an inboard engine in a Hurley 22?
Its possible to start from scratch, but you will need deep pockets?
How easy would it be to fit an inboard engine in a Hurley 22?
Thanks for that Nick - you're the man who knows. I think it's a bit of a non-starter finance wise. I'd like for a H22 bilge keeler with an inboard and had seen a cheap one without engine (or mountings) hence the question. I think I'd do better paying more for one with inboard already fitted.A Farryman 7.5-hp is a good engine to fit. They are compact and very reliable as they are fitted to most small diesel genorators found on boats.
The Yanmar 1GM and YSE8 were often fitted to Hurley yachts.
Thanks for that Nick - you're the man who knows. I think it's a bit of a non-starter finance wise. I'd like for a H22 bilge keeler with an inboard and had seen a cheap one without engine (or mountings) hence the question. I think I'd do better paying more for one with inboard already fitted.
Ravensail fitted the Yanmar 1GM to their Hurley 22s and it was a brilliant engine for the boat -so far superior to the outboard in a well jobs that it transformed cruising ability in terms of range and endurance in bad weather. Friends with the outboard model reported problems with their engines suffocating - some had to run the engine with the well lid open just to let it breath - which is no use at all in rough seas. Proper alternator also had enough output to run full electrics. So if you fancy a new inboard and don't mind the cost I think it will transform the boat. My only caveat other than cost is that mine was the long fin which made installation straightforward , the shaft came out of the flat (vertical) face of the keel - I think doing it on a bilge keeler would be much trickier.
Robin
Pleiades of Birdham
MXWQ5
Robin,
I always have a great respect for your posts and knowledge, but may I suggest this is not your best topic !
I knew a couple of good boatbuilders ( - average sailors it must be said ) who had a Ravenglass H22.
She had a Dolphin inboard, the worst of both worlds of course, the installation hassle of an inboard with the petrol fuel of an outboard, and to cap it all, fixed forward gear, start and they were off !
Clutches and reverse gears were available for Dolphins and I know someone who collects them, but to be frank it seems like lawnmower rather than seagoing kit to me.
Fitting any inboard, even a YGM-1 - admittedly the best option I know of - is a horrible wight and drag penalty on a boat which cannot really afford it.
A twin keel Hurley 22 will funnel any weed / flotsam / pot buoys straight to the prop'.
The propshaft is always a potential source of worrying / disastrous leaks.
It's weight in the wrong place.
You can't take it home to service it.
Corrosion will knobble it.
With an outboard well, one simply lifts and stows the engine then fits the well plug ( there IS one, isn't there ?! ) ; zero prop drag, zero chance of a lobster pot line around it.
Also if motoring and one collects a pot line around the prop', its' simple to raise the engine and use the old breadknife kept handy to remove the line in the safety of the cockpit - compared to diving underneath, how about in the dark ? -.
I find the 2-stroke Mariner 5hp is / was the best powerplant available for this size boat, any larger and the fuel consumption is awful ( I get 2.5 hours per gallon at 4.7-5knots in calms on my Anderson 22 ) and one can lift the engine to stow it and put the fairing blank in when sailing, which is the main point of the exercise.
There are a few inboard engine equipped Anderson 22's, which are basically similar to a Hurley 22 but a bit more slippery in air and water, maybe a touch less displacement.
The inboard equipped A22's have various engines from BMW to Dolphin with Yanmar inbetween, but the sad fact as I and most owners see it is one gets vastly better rewards from the slight effort ( in the A22 design case ) of putting a suitably light outboard in and out.
If elderly or otherwise bothered, I suppose one can do a lot worse than a Yanmar, good engines; but I know someone who picked up a peach of a late, well equipped re-engined Centaur for a steal - depends what you want from a boat !
Small diesels fit relatively easily in Hurley 22 yachts. Ravensail fitted the Yanmar 1GM. The weight was amidships roughly and the prop did not come out of the water when going over a wave.
The weight of a small diesel is not a lot more than an outboard.
All bilge keel yachts have the motor in the centre so can't see how an inboard would make any difference regarding getting weed around it?
Owners of Hunters and Moodys with inboards don't see it as a problem?
The thing is that choice of a yacht is very personal and people should not knock anothers choice.
Don't really want to get into (another?) argument with you - but you are talking a load of tosh. A Yanmar 1GM will significantly improve the overall capability of a Hurley 22 as a pocket cruiser. The outboard engine well is one of those that suffers from fumes and being behind the rudder makes any reversing a lottery.
The main reason you see so few fitted with inboards is purely cost. Even when the boats were new the cost of an inboard was disproportionate to the overall cost of the boat - and motors available in the early days were poor. The 1GM was specifically designed for 22-25' or so boats as its light weight, simplicity and small size made it feasible to fit it.
As everybody else on this thread has said - good choice for the boat, but not an economic proposition to retrofit, but worth having if you can find one already fitted.
Please don't try and reply - you will only dig yourself into a bigger hole.
Nick, EH ?!
Ravensail fitted the Dolphin to my erstwhile chums' boat, known as the H22R I seem to remember.
I'd love to see a diagram as to how the weight of the engine was amidships please ?
Yes all twin keel - not bilge keel with a centre keel and bilge plates - boats will tend to funnel pot buoys or flotsam etc onto the central prop', the Hurley would be no better or worse in this respect but it's a lot more vulnerable with a fixed central prop than an outboard in a well only when required, a flush hull the rest of the time - which also greatly helps sailing speed and reduces passage times.
My boat has the engine in a well and I'd have to really try to get the prop out of the water, it's a very good solution compared to hanging the engine off the back end, but we're discussing the pro's and cons of inboards...
I don't have the figures to hand, but comparing weights if you really felt you had to drop an engine on me I'd much rather it was a Mariner 5 2-stroke than a Yanmar diesel.
I have a nasty feeling someone is carving that on my tombstone somewhere, I'm sensing something coming through the ether, a name beginning with 'T' ? !![]()