BruceK
Well-Known Member
Contradicting nicely what Bruce infers in his diatribe of post #6 ..
How so? I'd agree with him. Maybe you should read past the first sentence.
Contradicting nicely what Bruce infers in his diatribe of post #6 ..
We considered a Broom 38cl that had KAMD44’s and concluded that they were just the wrong engines for that type of semi-displacement cruiser. Not many had them - most were Perkins or Yanmars.
Boating on Ye Thames.
Chum has a Faultline Brava 36 or 37 ( depending on the broker selling it) with pair of KAD 235 HP.
The constant racket and banshee howling of these engines along with the crunching lurch as the compressors cut in and out when the skipper desperately tries to maintain a constant 8 kms speed is less than relaxing !
Main memory of delivering the boat from Limehouse to Bray was trying to hang on as the boat surged back and forth and the racket from the engines while standing on the aft deck even though the patio doors were closed.
Some skippers fit a switch to disable the electro mechanical thingy that makes the blower engage ?
Just saying![]()
You said this -How so? I'd agree with him. Maybe you should read past the first sentence.
I fitted the silencers off a KAD44/300. Made a massive difference to noise output. Ogura make the SC. It has an rev operting range that so long as it is not exceeded can run indefinitely. If I recall correctly that is 11k rpm. Obviously that is the SC rpm and not engine rpm. The SC is designed not to get you onto the plane quicker although that is a side benefit, it is designed so there is no turbo lag you get with a bigger turbo. It fills the gap it takes a smaller turbo to spin up and in addition helps a smaller turbo spin up earlier. i.e. your turbo will be making about 1 bar of pressure at 2500 rpm with the SC having given it boost but without the SC boost may only spin up to make 1 bar once you've reached 3k rpm on initial take off. Can you run without a SC or even turbo? Sure, if the pump smoke limiter is functioning properly it will sense a reduction in boost and retard the amount of fuel delivered accordingly. Opting for a smaller or finer pitched prop could absolve you of needing to run the SC at all if you dont need the torque to get over the hump. The previous owner of my boat disabled the the SC's and had finer pitch props on. The boat would leap onto the plane, wasnt fast, but could travel any speed within it's range effortlessly. The above being true for the 42 and 43 but not for the 44 and 300 where the SC becomes an integral part of ECU operations.
H,mm ,well it was me rocking to and fro as we proceeded between the locks using one hand to cling to the flybridge ladder and the other two to cover my ears.There is no way he could be have been sticking to the speed limit if the superchargers were cutting in, 8 kph =5mph =4.3knts rarely more than 1200/1300 rpm on any AD/KAD twin engined boat on the Thames.
May I ask why you concluded they were the wrong type of engine? Was it to do with the compressor?
complete and utter drivel. If you are going to post technical information, please learn some basic physics, engineering, stop being patronising and some basic english grammar wouldn't go amiss either. Many engines in a variety of applications use belt driven superchargers that are run for long periods.Running with the SC on for extended periods puts undue pressure on the spindle bearings and shafts of the other stuff connected to the same belts .The belt tension suddenly increases .A short 20 sec bursts is do able , but constant running ?? Bad idea .
This leads to premature failure of said items .
The bolt on nature of the SC in the development of the KAD series from its none SC base doner is the issue for prolong running .
The other component s on the belt we’re not specced for the additional lateral SC “on “ loads indefinitely.
There is possibly with some ( you need to do your own due diligence exactly which ? ) an issue with overfilling if you fit a switch or otherwise disable the SC belt.The rpm sensor tells the ECU once above the cut in - say 1400 rpm or what ever ,to feed more fuel in to match the additional air vol it thinks it’s gonna get .
Obviously if the SC is disabled then the fuel air mix becomes over rich , you are risking injector premature failure.
Yeh designed from the drawing board up .complete and utter drivel. If you are going to post technical information, please learn some basic physics, engineering, stop being patronising and some basic english grammar wouldn't go amiss either. Many engines in a variety of applications use belt driven superchargers that are run for long periods.
Back up what you say ? I see like Bruce , a low ball insult go for the man not the ball over the grammarcomplete and utter drivel. If you are going to post technical information, please learn some basic physics, engineering, stop being patronising and some basic english grammar wouldn't go amiss either. Many engines in a variety of applications use belt driven superchargers that are run for long periods.
Why did they do it then ?
Move away from Perkins /Nanni for a SC KAD jobbie for mixed river / estuary use ? Do tell !
Yet more misleading and technically inaccurate information. You really are not helping. Forum members on the mobo forum are often looking for help and good advice. Why do you post incorrect information and post links that support myths and gossip?Yeh designed from the drawing board up .
Comparing auto manufacturing none clutch belt tension jolting on components , durability to what VP evolved is a flawed .
The extra tension on the belt in a VP KAD set up if the SC s run continually strains the other pulley in the system spindles / bearings = premature failure .
Not so in a Merc etc as they were designed from a blank sheet for continuous running .
Sorry you lack he mental elasticity to differentiate.
A sign is the kads eat belts .Why ? When others do not ? What’s going on there ?
I think you have no real experience at all of kad engines. If the boat in question was in and out of the supercharger range at 4.5kts it must have been seriously under propped or otherwise the superchargers cutting in way too early.Boating on Ye Thames.
Chum has a Faultline Brava 36 or 37 ( depending on the broker selling it) with pair of KAD 235 HP.
The constant racket and banshee howling of these engines along with the crunching lurch as the compressors cut in and out when the skipper desperately tries to maintain a constant 8 kms speed is less than relaxing !
Main memory of delivering the boat from Limehouse to Bray was trying to hang on as the boat surged back and forth and the racket from the engines while standing on the aft deck even though the patio doors were closed.
Some skippers fit a switch to disable the electro mechanical thingy that makes the blower engage ?
Just saying![]()