Mercruiser engine hours

jon and michie

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Hi - my 1 of many questions is - I am looking at a 1996 bayliner 2855 with a mercruiser diesel engine.
Is 900 hours too many hours or is this a good thing as it is moored near the coast and would assume it hasn't been plodding along down a river.

all help/opinions welcomed.
Jon
 
I don't know about that particular engine or that type of boat really but that doesn't seem a lot for 19 years use. Use is probably better for them than sitting doing nothing. Might be worth worrying more about the outdrive?
 
Hi Jon,

900 hours is not a lot, I have 2 Mercruiser 4.2 D on a 1997 Sealine S37 and have around 1800 hours on each engine so even at 100 hours per year it's no drama.

Would be more concerned with service history, a bag full of receipts from the owners engineer would reassure me that the boat has been looked after.

1 thing I would mention, I had a 2858 and without a bow thruster it can be challenging but otherwise a great boat despite some folks bashing Bayliners.

Good luck and don't forget to post pics if you go ahead with the purchase.

Regards

Andy
 
thank you for your replies so far
so my next question are mercruiser parts fairly easy to obtain? I believe they derived from vm engines (Italian) which I know are good engines as I had a 2.5td in my frontera and never let me down once (they just keep going)

Jon and Michie
P/S will check service history etc etc
 
engine hours

Hi - my 1 of many questions is - I am looking at a 1996 bayliner 2855 with a mercruiser diesel engine.
Is 900 hours too many hours or is this a good thing as it is moored near the coast and would assume it hasn't been plodding along down a river.

all help/opinions welcomed.
Jon

Hello,

The engines are good for thousands of hours, and as others have said its a matter of maintenance. IIRC this boat has the 180 HP Mercruiser engine, and they can be very sensitive for overheating. Ideally the heatexchangers should be cleaned every one/two years. Its not difficult and could well be a DIY job, but it takes time to do it, so if you need a mechanic to do this it will cost you .... The cleaning should include the waterblender (where seawater goes into the exhaust) as it can get blocked with scales. A good seatrial will show whether this specific boat needs immediate care - ask for half an hour with WOT, and should there be a problem it will show much earlier. Engine hours is def not a problem.
 
thank you piratos for you input - I will be getting surveyed and with a sea trial so hopefully all will become clear.

thanks again

jon
 
I too have had a 2855.

Bayliners have always been derided by the 'experts' but they offer large boats for less cost.

My petrol one with 5.7l / 250hp (could have been 275) when new, managed 28kts but as the cruising junk piled up was not nearly as lively.
I would now go for the biggest petrol engine.

It is interesting that this diesel boat has only done <50 hours a year and I am wondering why you are swapping performance for (little)economy.

Do check the max speed on the trial.
 
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Running hours do not concern me, its the long periods sat idle doing nothing that does! Make sure you have the boat inspected (including the fuel tanks) and conduct a full seatrial.
 
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