gobofraggle
New Member
Hi guys,
Hoping for some assistance, I managed to get behind the wheel of a twin D4 300 setup and noticed something strange with the function of the kill cord.
Ok a little bit of back story first, I know the boat and its had a kill cord issue for as long as I remember (its a 3 yo boat).
If anyone out there has issues with a kill cord on an EVC engine heres how i got it going after searching the google for a couple of days. On the loom there is the break out cable for the kill cord which initially would do nothing whether shorted out or disconnected. Short the 2 connections then run an auto configure on the helm station, press and hold take control for 5 secs, then when the screen says autoconfigure 1.0 press the same button again for 5 seconds. all the helm station lights will flash and the the system will reboot.. wait til it finishes then if you have the 2.5" screens select which is port and which is stbd.
Connect the kill cord and test, the switch could be mis-wired as n/o when it should be n/c (this is where i had the initial problem if its connected n/o the autoconfig will disregard the kill cord and it will do nothing)
Still with me... good this is where strange, well i think strange, I've never seen this behaviour before happens. Cruising along relatively slow considering the 600hp behind me, i pull the cord the engines stop the display show safety lanyard dis engaged with the little warning triangle that Volvo love so much next to the letters SLY and i think happy days i've fixed a long standing issue thats been niggling at me for ages!
Then i press the start button for the engines and without the lanyard being connected and the engines fire up, the warning triangle still happily glaring at me as that thing does regularly, and i look at my hand which is firmly clutching the kill cord, then i look back to the console showing the engines happily purring away. At this point I think 'AAAHH it must be a limp home mode, driver and kill cord in the water, passengers can fire up and pootle back to pick the poor damp sailor up.' Nope wrong no kill cord i can gun the engine and get it back up to 40knots with no safeties attached.
Long post, love a good story... so my question is is this normal behaviour for a D4/D6 etc, do any of you fine people have any experience with this problem, as i was always under the impression if you have no kill cord you better get the oars out!
Hoping for some assistance, I managed to get behind the wheel of a twin D4 300 setup and noticed something strange with the function of the kill cord.
Ok a little bit of back story first, I know the boat and its had a kill cord issue for as long as I remember (its a 3 yo boat).
If anyone out there has issues with a kill cord on an EVC engine heres how i got it going after searching the google for a couple of days. On the loom there is the break out cable for the kill cord which initially would do nothing whether shorted out or disconnected. Short the 2 connections then run an auto configure on the helm station, press and hold take control for 5 secs, then when the screen says autoconfigure 1.0 press the same button again for 5 seconds. all the helm station lights will flash and the the system will reboot.. wait til it finishes then if you have the 2.5" screens select which is port and which is stbd.
Connect the kill cord and test, the switch could be mis-wired as n/o when it should be n/c (this is where i had the initial problem if its connected n/o the autoconfig will disregard the kill cord and it will do nothing)
Still with me... good this is where strange, well i think strange, I've never seen this behaviour before happens. Cruising along relatively slow considering the 600hp behind me, i pull the cord the engines stop the display show safety lanyard dis engaged with the little warning triangle that Volvo love so much next to the letters SLY and i think happy days i've fixed a long standing issue thats been niggling at me for ages!
Then i press the start button for the engines and without the lanyard being connected and the engines fire up, the warning triangle still happily glaring at me as that thing does regularly, and i look at my hand which is firmly clutching the kill cord, then i look back to the console showing the engines happily purring away. At this point I think 'AAAHH it must be a limp home mode, driver and kill cord in the water, passengers can fire up and pootle back to pick the poor damp sailor up.' Nope wrong no kill cord i can gun the engine and get it back up to 40knots with no safeties attached.
Long post, love a good story... so my question is is this normal behaviour for a D4/D6 etc, do any of you fine people have any experience with this problem, as i was always under the impression if you have no kill cord you better get the oars out!