Graham376
Well-Known Member
Plenty of '70s boats still around with original engines.
I have a feeling that car engines are more stressed than boat engines, so a few guesses.
Car lasts 150k miles, with average speed of 40mph, so 3750 hours.
With a wild assumption that a well used boat notches up 200 hours per year, that gives a very approx lifetime of 18 years. Does that seem reasonable ?
Agreed, boat engines sit to death, not run to death.I wonder if it’s not so much the running time but the non running time that affects Diesel engines.
The computer on my car tells me I've averaged about 40mph.Not to me. I doubt many car engines are worn out at 150k miles, that they average 40mph over their life, or that they are even beginning to be worn out at 3,750 hours.
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Based on a Perkins industrial engine, keep changing the oil and filters and it will go for everPlease do not say that, as My Volvo 2020MD has 5000 hours after 16 years . Drips oil from somewhere. But so far only 2 raw water pumps, a couple of glow relays, exhaust elbow, engine mount bracket & alternator reconned twice. Last thing I want right now is to have to buy a new engine.
I took a spare Perkins Prima 50 head (aka VP MD22) to my local machine shop for skimming. An old fashioned one with a man who had been there since Hitler was a lance corporal. He asked how were the bores and pistons. I said still well within spec, he said, I bought some oversize pistons nearly 50 years ago for one of those, the trouble with them is they dont wear out!The computer on my car tells me I've averaged about 40mph.
When is a car engine 'worn out'?
When it can no longer be started? When it loses more than x% of power? when it leaks oil? Maybe when something like a head gasket goes and it's not worth repairing?
Few actually go BANG! with a definitive end of life.
These days many will still be 'functioning' when they fail the MOT BER on emissions.
Boat engines tend to be simpler, but I suspect less precisely made. More like 60s and 70s cars where the engines were sometimes pretty tired at 50k miles, work was usually needed by 100k miles.
People in industry who run generators with similar engines to a sailing yacht seem to regard 10k hours as an acceptable life and 20k as wishful thinking.
rolls royce merlins overhead camshaft - Google Search:And R-R Merlins, etc., iirc.
Old raw water cooled engines tend to die of overheating, imho. Yanmar 4JH5E on boat has 4,700 hours; a friend’s similar boat has an earlier model with 9,700 hours and it seems fine. Car has a Ford Transit 2.2 litre diesel and seems happy at 225,000 miles.
Yep.I wonder if it’s not so much the running time but the non running time that affects Diesel engines.
My link was to show Merlins are OHC. Your post agreed with someone that said Yanmar are pushrod, they are. Your post intimated that RR merlins were the same, pushrod, they aint!The Merlin has a cast aluminium ‘gear case’ at the aft (non-propeller) end of the engine. Quite a lot goes on in here, much of it to do with the supercharger, but the gear case also contains the drives for the camshafts, which are indeed overhead, and are driven by bevel gears which drive angled shafts which drive bevel gears which drive the camshafts. Pretty standard stuff for 1933.
They are not driven by chains, still less by belts!
My link was to show Merlins are OHC. Your post agreed with someone that said Yanmar are pushrod, they are. Your post intimated that RR merlins were the same, pushrod, they aint!
Marine engines live hard lives; it is the sitting, running without load (to charge the batteries) and poor maintenance that kills them, not the running.
I asked a Perkins engineer that question and the rough guide was 10,000 hrs to a rebuild then another 8 to 10,000. We run HGVs and they work on similar hours.How long does an engine last?