csoule13 wrote:
Unless you are a better wrench swinger than I am, which isn't a high bar to clear, there's only so much we can do. Use clean fuel, deal with any fuel problems when they arise, change the oil and keep the cooling system in good shape. After that, it's just as much a matter of fate and luck and probabilities.
Appreciate the additional POV, and I think that makes sense. I’m not a fretter by nature, and once I learn everything I can about the engine and it proves reliable, I’ll generally stop worrying.
My real hope is to extend the life of the engine long enough that repowering with an electrical motor is cost-effective and proven. I think we’re not too far off.
ghockaday wrote:
A diesel will not run forever if it is a saltwater boat that is raw water cooled. My opinion is still that its the environment not the hours.
I’m fortunate that my boat has been in freshwater for 20 years, after spending the previous 20 in saltwater. I’m assuming that after 20 years, whatever damage the salt had done would have made itself known.
ghockaday wrote:
As others have pointed out
- good maintenance
- clean fuel (no algae or water in the fuel tank that sits too long)
- clean air
- good compression
- oil never getting up to temperature to burn the condensate out of it
- strainers getting plugged and running hot from time to time.
Thanks! I'll put these on the list.
Jack.Ducas wrote:
I own a 1982 CD30 with the raw water cooled Volvo MD7 in it. When I bought the boat in 1996 I had no idea of how many hours were on it. It started and ran ok. Fast forward 5-6 years. I started to see an accumulation of soot on the stern and the starting became more of an issue. When it did start I noticed it would smoke a little. This is a 2 cyl motor and I would hear 1 cyl firing until it got enough fuel into it to fire off the second cyl and then come to life pushing out even more black smoke. It's a sail boat, I lived with it for another 3-4 years. I was fortunate to have access to a compression gage (diesel engines require unique gages for this) from a Volvo certified marine mechanic 1/4 mile from where I worked. When I did finally get around to checking it 2-3 years later I found one cylinder was significantly lower than the other which is why I'd hear 1 cyl firing first. That's when I found a second MD7 and began a complete rebuild (1st over pistons, bearings, rebuilt injectors and high pressure pump) in my garage knowing things don't fix themselves. That motor sat in the garage for another 3-4 years while old smokey got worse. End of season cold starting here in the NE would take 30 to 40 seconds of cranking over. It still ran, I changed it out. I guess my point is old diesels will start and run for a long time.
Great story! I love it! I wonder whether you would have gotten even more years out of it had that low compression piston been rebuilt when symptoms first started.
ghockaday wrote:
A day sailing boat with a diesel is hard on them. Better than gas by far. but starting and running 20 minutes to get out the slip, turning it off sailing for the day, starting running 20 minutes to get back in the slip is far harder than running up to temperature for a days work. A lot of wear is when a dry engine is turning over, before oil pressure comes up.
Just my opinion, but diesels are meant to work. The harder that work with proper maintenance, the longer they last. I have know truck drivers that never shut their truck down. (when fuel was cheap) unless it was going to sit for few days.
This brings up an interesting question.
Is it a good idea to warm up your engine before taking it out of the marina? If warming up is good, do you warm up by idling, by running at medium rpms without load, or by running under load?
JD-MDR wrote:
All I meant was
- change the oil and filters often (I change the oil every 100 hrs., some do it after 50hrs..
- change the fuel less often maybe 200-300 hrs. I use one of those pumps that goes on a drill motor to suck the crud out of my fuel tank. I would pull the tank but it's really set in there. It's more work than I want to do right now.
- I've flushed out my raw water cooling system with a 7:1 ratio of muriatic acid and water several times in the 5 years I ve had this boat
- I took it all apart and cleaned the exhaust manifold manually and replaced all the old hoses, thermostat and water pump.
- OH... don't use cheap oil. I use Chevron Delo 400 for diesels
Awesome! I’ll add these items to my list.
Would you change anything about the flush in a freshwater boat?
tjr818 wrote:
You can send oil samples to a lab, such as Blackstone, and they will analyze the oil, looking for metal deposits, oil contamination, higher than normal temperatures, etc. the first analysis is often revealing, but annual analysis will pick up trends and help with predictions. When I was flying we used to do this for all engines every 100 hours. For our 27 that would have been every seven years. We did it almost every other year
Fascinating! I’m really curious how often this finds issues that you might not find otherwise.