Ramona's suggestion is right on the mark.
Every little bit of inaccuracy with shaft, prop and alignment steals horsepower.
southace said...cisco said...
A 1987 boat!! She is getting long in the tooth so it may be time to go the whole hog.
A skilled and experienced marine engineer could probably pin point the problem by ear.
Thats a bit harsh Cisco!
Not really southace. Was just trying to point out what he
might have to go through.
If Ben could get an experienced marine engineering trades person on board for a brief motoring jaunt, he would most likely be able to point directly to the problem.
Nothing like being there and knowing some history of the yacht and asking questions like "Have you ever fouled the prop on anything at all."
I am making a fair bet that one of the prop blades is off pitch. There is always a certain amount of vibration on any engine powered vessel.
I had the experience years ago with my alloy Peterson 42 at one slipping where I removed the prop (fixed 3 blade) took it to the shop for pitch checking and balancing.
One blade was 2" out on the pitch and balance was slightly off. These were rectified, it was refitted and I did as accurate an engine align as I could (just under 3 thou).
The result was with a clean bottom that I could get an extra 300 RPM from the engine and my top cruising speed went from 7 knots to
9 knots.
That is impressive for any 40 foot yacht.
The joy was short lived though because within two months I was back to 7.5 knots due to the flexible engine mounts settling back into their position and the engine alignment going back to 9 thou out.
Before my steel Van De Stadt 34 goes back in the water I will be hard mounting the engine, probably with hardwood blocks, and be buggered with the extra noise.
There are synthetic hard engine mount blocks I have seen used, but I do not know what it is called or where to get them.
Can anybody fill me in on that??