Portofino
Well-Known Member
thats not correct. With a total raw water flow failure the downstream egt temp will rise a couple of hundred degrees C within literally a couple of seconds. Downstream egt sensors (along with a raw water pressure/flow alarm) are the only sensible way to get a fast alarm. If you wait to see the jacket water temp rise you've already got your plastic/rubber exhaust system nicely on fire and your holiday is over.
Ref MAN, engine manufacturers don't include downstream egt in their instrumentation because they don't make exhaust systems.
All Agreed ,but in the MAN set up ( which the OP has ) I was basing my post on UPSTREAM EGT .
Next time I,am on the boat I,ll find out if they measure raw water pressure -next week .
I guess if you have rubber / plastic then a down stream EGT is probably a good idea .
In my installation we have stainless steel risers going into a underwater box -full of sea water ,with a little pipe coming out to tell tales on the stern .Most of the exhaust exits underwater .
I understand Mario Amarti was one of the first in not the first to build boats in Euorope with underwater exhaust - way back in the early 80's .
I think with all this data as I said the engines hopefully will tell you when it's ready to be opened up
As opposed to strict 2 y by the book .
Also the OCD of the MAN manual it says " do not let the idle for more than 2 minutes - turn them off "
In real life in marinas ,at fuel pontoons ,at anchorages etc -that's not realistic .
Apparently they can -get this " over cool" so you must if are doing by the book do not them idle for more than 2 mins !
I have never seen anybody MAN or otherwise drift about with the engines off -cos they have exceeded the 2min rule -as per book .



