#21
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boat's normally ran "heavy",with a full load of fuel 150g previous wheel was a merc mirage 3 blade "tweaking" - the engine would turn the rpm i wanted,the whell went to the prop shop for some tweaking,to get the rev's i wanted.the boat will run faster,with more pitch in the wheel...
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#22
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BigLew, Sorry I'm late to the party but happy to share my thoughts. For comparison, I have a '78 Sceptre with a 7.4L Bravo One, and a full cored-glass half-tower, EZ2CY enclosure with radar arch, riggers, etc. (definitely adds some weight compared to the bimini/3 sided enclosure on before). First thing I would check is to see if your drive can handle the additional torque of the motors you are talking about. I have some familiarity with the Volvo's, but not as much as Merc; I do know you would not want to mate any of these motors with a Merc Alpha 1 drive by comparison. With respect to your tankage, I have two tanks also. My aft tank is around 65 useable and the forward around 45 useable. I would strongly recommend the larger tank be aft and here's why. Others here have said the Sceptre/Tsunami I/O sits and rides differently and it does. The CG on these is considerably farther forward than the CC's, especially with a hardtop and a bunch of gear in the cabin. I typically burn the fuel in my forward tank first, then use my trim and/or tabs to bring the bow further down if conditions warrant to compensate for the reduced weight up there. Works especially well on a long trip; when I suck air on my forward tank, I know I've burned less than 1/2 my capacity and I also would not want the forward tank full and the aft tank empty if I had a long way home in a big following sea. As far as performance numbers, I may not be a good comparison. My 454 is carbed (4bbl Quadrajet) and I'm pretty certain I'm due for a carb rebuild on top of having a vacuum leak somewhere (almost 1900 hours on this block now). Between that and using my tabs a lot, my performance suffered a bit this past season (need to get a good mechanic to go through my motor - I am not one). That said, at 3000-3200, in calm conditions and depending on load, I will cruise at 22-24 knots burning 10-12 gallons/hour. 3500-3600 gives 26-28 knots, and I'm guessing 15-18 gallons/hour. If it is snotty out and I'm using a lot of tab (I have the big Kiekhafer K-Planes on my boat - like dragging two five gallon buckets behind the boat when you have them down more than a bit) all these numbers fall apart and get ugly quickly. I think a 5.7 or 6.2 litre block, at the higher horsepower ratings, would do very well in your boat. I would not be afraid of an injected engine, you just need to educate yourself with it, and would be very careful to consider the torque and torque curve. Ideally you would find a motor that is very strong torque-wise at a cruising rpm of 3000 or so. Or you could spend your kid's inheritance and drop in a Cummins QSB with a Konrad drive. Good luck and feel free to ask me any questions. |
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