nimbusgb
Well-Known Member
Beneteau Oceanis 390. Perkins 4108, 5000 hours and AFAIK the prop is the same one fitted to the boat 25 years ago. 3 blade fixed pitch (unknown) but 5 knots at 1900 rpm with a fairly foul bottom. Gearbox is near as damnit 2:1. The boats documents document list the engine at 50hp ( the 4108 had lots of variants I know )
I cant verify the indicated RPM is right but it 'sounds' about right. I have an optical rev counter to use next time I'm aboard .
The engine is fitted with an impeller housing with two impellers with a dividing plate between them, essentially two pumps but the dividing plate does have a small equalisation hole between the two chambers. The rear chamber takes raw water from the seacock and pumps it into the heat exchanger mounted on the top of the engine, the overflow from that goes to the exhaust injector elbow. The forward chamber takes water from somewhere ( It MUST be a takeoff from the heat exchanger surely ) and pushes it to the stern gland ( rubber boot fed with 'bearing' water ). The normal engine pump also drives a calorifier circuit, that water gets good and hot.
Last trip out to the boat I fitted a large intake strainer with a clear lid between the seacock and the first pump. There is a filter with a very fine stainless mesh between the second pump and the stern gland.
Engine gets hot if run above about 1900 rpm. Evidence is first a little steam out of the exhaust and then eventually ( 10 mins? ) a high temperature warning and an indicated 100 degrees C.
I think that there may be too little water being delivered to the heat exchanger, the amount coming out of the exhaust seems to be somewhat less than other boats. How much water is needed? Running the motor ashore sucking intake water from a bucket would allow me to measure the flow I suppose ( any thermodynamics engineers here? )
Shouldn't the engine be able to run significantly higher than 2000 rpm? The manual I have off the internet suggests max power ( 46hp ) at around 4000 and max continuous (37) at 3000. That sounds about right for this kind of diesel but no way is this one going to run that fast form more than a few minutes without overheating!
My geuss is that there has been no significant maintenance on this engine in several thousand hours
Does the engine need de scaling and de coking. ( think I know the answer to this one! )
TIA
Ian
I cant verify the indicated RPM is right but it 'sounds' about right. I have an optical rev counter to use next time I'm aboard .
The engine is fitted with an impeller housing with two impellers with a dividing plate between them, essentially two pumps but the dividing plate does have a small equalisation hole between the two chambers. The rear chamber takes raw water from the seacock and pumps it into the heat exchanger mounted on the top of the engine, the overflow from that goes to the exhaust injector elbow. The forward chamber takes water from somewhere ( It MUST be a takeoff from the heat exchanger surely ) and pushes it to the stern gland ( rubber boot fed with 'bearing' water ). The normal engine pump also drives a calorifier circuit, that water gets good and hot.
Last trip out to the boat I fitted a large intake strainer with a clear lid between the seacock and the first pump. There is a filter with a very fine stainless mesh between the second pump and the stern gland.
Engine gets hot if run above about 1900 rpm. Evidence is first a little steam out of the exhaust and then eventually ( 10 mins? ) a high temperature warning and an indicated 100 degrees C.
I think that there may be too little water being delivered to the heat exchanger, the amount coming out of the exhaust seems to be somewhat less than other boats. How much water is needed? Running the motor ashore sucking intake water from a bucket would allow me to measure the flow I suppose ( any thermodynamics engineers here? )
Shouldn't the engine be able to run significantly higher than 2000 rpm? The manual I have off the internet suggests max power ( 46hp ) at around 4000 and max continuous (37) at 3000. That sounds about right for this kind of diesel but no way is this one going to run that fast form more than a few minutes without overheating!
My geuss is that there has been no significant maintenance on this engine in several thousand hours
Does the engine need de scaling and de coking. ( think I know the answer to this one! )
TIA
Ian