jfm
Well-Known Member
OK! That rather changes things 180 degrees. I need a translator!no "he " is you -excuse my carp English![]()
I agree that, to a degree, but it wasn't what we were discussing and isn't what O/P asked. RPM only stays the same if the max fuel delivery rate set in the ECU or by the fuel system is sufficient to maintain that RPM; in other words, GPH cannot just keep going up - it hits a ceiling. When it hits that ceiling any more load on the boat reduces RPM (and speed, and GPH, and EGT) until a new equilibrium is found. The ceiling isn't theoretical or distant: most boats are set up on sea trials to be just nudging the ceiling at WOT, and a bit under it at cruise speedweight kills speed - if overloaded the rpm stays the same -boat slows -but EGT -load and GPH shoot up .