mickyb
Member
Hi there.
I'm completely new to this and this is my first post.
I recently went to view a beautifully kept Sealine 290 with twin Volvo AD31 130hp diesels and i'm really hoping to buy her (my first proper sea going boat).
After thoroughly looking round the boat the owner took us out for a spin.
There were four adults on board and as the owner opened the throttles she refused to get over the 'hump' and onto the plane, we were sat at 10 - 12 kts with the bow in the air and no matter what he did with the trim tabs, she just wouldn't get going... There was more black smoke than I would have thought was normal coming out of the back and with both throttles wide open the engines weren't revving much past 2000 - 2500 rpm - certainly no where near 3800 (which volvo say they should get to).
Now i've done as much research as I can on the net and spoke to various people to try and find out what the problem is (im a bit 'green' when it comes to problems like this with diesels).
One of the obvious things that was apparent was the hull and outdrive legs were by no means clean (v green and slimy). So fine, this could be why she didn't get up on the plane, but to the novice, it doesn't explain why the engine revs remained so low? - I thought the engines would do their business regardless of the hull being mucky..
(just move a lot of water but still spin up).
The other thought I had was this... The owners of the boat (v nice couple incidently) generally cruise around at 8-9 kts and rarely open her up. We once had an inland/estuary boat (Freeman 28) with a diddy Volvo 2003T engine and this had a similar problem after we just bought her. Obviously the boat was never capable of getting anywhere near the plane, but when we opened her up, there was hardly any grunt. It turns out that because of several years of canal speed cruising, the turbo was sooted up to the eyeballs and wouldn't spin. We stripped the turbo down and the problem was solved.. Could the sealine have the same problem? - I think that may explain the black smoke (and it was coming from both engines - the transom was black on both sides when we got back to her berth).
When we came back into the marina, I asked the owner to open the engine bay and start the engines again and rev them in neutral - see if we could hear the turbos.. The there was no sign of a whine, but I subsequently read somewhere else that on AD31s you can't hear the turbos whine when in neutral, the engines have to be under load.
What I hope (after all my reading and asking questions) the problem is, is that because of the dirty hull, the boat couldn't get on the plane, therefore due to water resistance on the props the engines could not reach sufficient rpm for the boost to come in, and so the power was held back creating a vicious cycle therefore meaning lack of performance and fast displacement speed only. Im starting to think the black smoke may be caused by too much fuel going into the engines, and with a lack of revs - a lot of this would be unburned.. ? Does anyone know could this be plausible?
Please forgive me for such a long post, but this is a lot of money for me to be spending, and I just don't want to be landed with huge bills when I get her home (bit like what happened with my last girlfriend
)
Many thanks
M
I'm completely new to this and this is my first post.
I recently went to view a beautifully kept Sealine 290 with twin Volvo AD31 130hp diesels and i'm really hoping to buy her (my first proper sea going boat).
After thoroughly looking round the boat the owner took us out for a spin.
There were four adults on board and as the owner opened the throttles she refused to get over the 'hump' and onto the plane, we were sat at 10 - 12 kts with the bow in the air and no matter what he did with the trim tabs, she just wouldn't get going... There was more black smoke than I would have thought was normal coming out of the back and with both throttles wide open the engines weren't revving much past 2000 - 2500 rpm - certainly no where near 3800 (which volvo say they should get to).
Now i've done as much research as I can on the net and spoke to various people to try and find out what the problem is (im a bit 'green' when it comes to problems like this with diesels).
One of the obvious things that was apparent was the hull and outdrive legs were by no means clean (v green and slimy). So fine, this could be why she didn't get up on the plane, but to the novice, it doesn't explain why the engine revs remained so low? - I thought the engines would do their business regardless of the hull being mucky..
The other thought I had was this... The owners of the boat (v nice couple incidently) generally cruise around at 8-9 kts and rarely open her up. We once had an inland/estuary boat (Freeman 28) with a diddy Volvo 2003T engine and this had a similar problem after we just bought her. Obviously the boat was never capable of getting anywhere near the plane, but when we opened her up, there was hardly any grunt. It turns out that because of several years of canal speed cruising, the turbo was sooted up to the eyeballs and wouldn't spin. We stripped the turbo down and the problem was solved.. Could the sealine have the same problem? - I think that may explain the black smoke (and it was coming from both engines - the transom was black on both sides when we got back to her berth).
When we came back into the marina, I asked the owner to open the engine bay and start the engines again and rev them in neutral - see if we could hear the turbos.. The there was no sign of a whine, but I subsequently read somewhere else that on AD31s you can't hear the turbos whine when in neutral, the engines have to be under load.
What I hope (after all my reading and asking questions) the problem is, is that because of the dirty hull, the boat couldn't get on the plane, therefore due to water resistance on the props the engines could not reach sufficient rpm for the boost to come in, and so the power was held back creating a vicious cycle therefore meaning lack of performance and fast displacement speed only. Im starting to think the black smoke may be caused by too much fuel going into the engines, and with a lack of revs - a lot of this would be unburned.. ? Does anyone know could this be plausible?
Please forgive me for such a long post, but this is a lot of money for me to be spending, and I just don't want to be landed with huge bills when I get her home (bit like what happened with my last girlfriend
Many thanks
M