Tranona
Well-Known Member
Are you saying that nothing has changed over the last 40 years or so? The Bukh has its good points - and makes a good engine for a lifeboat which is rarely used and simplicity is valued.Traditional Bukh is a great piece of engine, and now - as far as I know - the only real marine engine still produced. I mean the Bukh DV (you can also buy Bukh-Beta (kubota) which is not).
Why change for inferior, when you have already boat set for one? Shaft, gears - cost some.
Purchasing new DV, 24 HP is costly (and worth it), but it was possible to exchange old for factory refurnished one (as good as new) for much less then buying even cheapest new engine. I heard something around 3-4000 euro, but not sure. Worth to ask I think.
Rebuilding one in Germany (not in factory but at dealer service) I was quoted about 2000 euro, more if some problems arise. But from factory you will get everything done anew. Rebuild at mechanic may leave some issues, you never know.
Talk with Bukh company directly, not the distributors, especially in UK - my tip.
http://www.bukh.dk/dv24rme/
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They are much better then new Kubotas (Beta) or Perkins (Volvo) and deliver real power - btw don't be misled by HP rating , as high-revving engines can be rated high HP - at 4000 revs, but would you use this? Even if so, prop will not probably deliver. I would say IMHO that for 20 HP bukh you should take at least 25 hp kubota to match performance at sea, that is against some resistance - or indeed invest in a better prop, as mentioned.
Only drawback of Bukh I know is raw water cooling, (it has a merit of simplicity though) - but that can be simply changed to indirect, no problem.
However, sailing boats have moved on. They are now warm and dry inside, have plenty of battery power, are smooth and refined. Owners want their engine to start and run smoothly and quietly as well as provided hot water on demand.
All this is possible with modern engines. Freshwater cooling allows the engine to run hotter and more efficiently and keeps the nasty hot seawater awway from the engine. The base engines used (mostly Japanese industrial diesels) will outlast most of the other equipment in the boat. 8000 hours is a typical life - given the typical leisure use of 150 hours a year that is over 50 years.
Just nonsense to say that a Bukh 20 hp engine is more powerful than a 25hp Kubota. If you hang around here long enough you will see (as in this post) people comment on the improved motoring performance and greater refinement they get when they replace old style engines with new ones. BTW the new engines don't rev to 4000 - 3600 is common, the latest Volvo Perkins is 3200 - and they are designed to run all day long at 3000+revs. Next time you go to a building site, look at the little diggers - they run all day, every day in conditions that make a yacht auxilliary look like luxury. My Volvo Perkins has run over 3500 hours from when I bought it new and runs just the same as it did when new 12 years ago.
This is not intended to knock Bukh - it is a fine bit of kit - just not the best thing for a modern yacht auxilliary.