Texasmark
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2005
- Messages
- 14,795
Weather is horrible. Non-home boy is home locked. :'
'( Surfed the www to pass the time. Thought about upgrading my 90 to a 4 cyl. 115.
If you are interested in the midrange higher hp engines you would be amazed at the offerings this year as compared to previous (maybe 5 years ago) years.
Seems I only have 2 options (2 stroke) on a 115: Rude or Yammy, to get a 4 cyl and they come as a V4 at that, and loop charged. Not bad. Merc is definitely out as they souped up what I have now (90 hp 3 cyl) and made a 115 out of it.....more of a bad thing (#1 nuisance clutch dog rattle has to be worse) I guess to rid themselves of their I4. Must have been a disaster with the 2-4 cylinder thing and rpm upper limit or the crank goes (so I hear). I thought Cadillac taught the industry that the 2-4-8 cylinder thing was a joke.....never had one, but if it was a success you'd still be seeing them in production wouldn't you think?
Besides, I liked my I6 Merc Tower of Power, but it was always in the way. The V4 is a nice low profile; better than my current 3 cyl which is a vast improvement over the I6.
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Anyway back to the plot. While surfing yesterday, I noticed some verbiage from Johnny/Rude about max HP ratings. They showed a plot (graph) of HP vs RPM for a particular engine, and in this graph HP peaked at 5000 RPM. It went on to say that the engine would probably be rated 4500 to 5500 for the WOT range.
Since HP = torque + RPM + a constant, that tells me that torque starts falling off causing HP to fall faster than RPM's increase. No surprise as I have seen a lot of automotive charts and they do that.
So following along the thought process I'd think that if I ran this particular engine at 5000 RPM, I ought to get max MPH and if I wasn't propped right and ran on up to say 6000 my speed should fall off cause the HP (that turns the prop) fell off.......but you gotta ask yourself how'd I get to 6000 if that were the case?
Well, that's not the case. My current engine is rated 5000-5500. But If I am running a prop that will allow me to go to 6000 (or more with another prop of less pitch) the boat speed keeps increasing as the RPM's increase.
Since the load on the prop (from the boat's water resistance and weight) should be about equal at those speeds (45-50 MPH), if the engine started having breathing problems and the torque fell off above the peak, then the boat should start slowing down, wouldn't you think?
Just Curious.
Mark
If you are interested in the midrange higher hp engines you would be amazed at the offerings this year as compared to previous (maybe 5 years ago) years.
Seems I only have 2 options (2 stroke) on a 115: Rude or Yammy, to get a 4 cyl and they come as a V4 at that, and loop charged. Not bad. Merc is definitely out as they souped up what I have now (90 hp 3 cyl) and made a 115 out of it.....more of a bad thing (#1 nuisance clutch dog rattle has to be worse) I guess to rid themselves of their I4. Must have been a disaster with the 2-4 cylinder thing and rpm upper limit or the crank goes (so I hear). I thought Cadillac taught the industry that the 2-4-8 cylinder thing was a joke.....never had one, but if it was a success you'd still be seeing them in production wouldn't you think?
Besides, I liked my I6 Merc Tower of Power, but it was always in the way. The V4 is a nice low profile; better than my current 3 cyl which is a vast improvement over the I6.
-------------------
Anyway back to the plot. While surfing yesterday, I noticed some verbiage from Johnny/Rude about max HP ratings. They showed a plot (graph) of HP vs RPM for a particular engine, and in this graph HP peaked at 5000 RPM. It went on to say that the engine would probably be rated 4500 to 5500 for the WOT range.
Since HP = torque + RPM + a constant, that tells me that torque starts falling off causing HP to fall faster than RPM's increase. No surprise as I have seen a lot of automotive charts and they do that.
So following along the thought process I'd think that if I ran this particular engine at 5000 RPM, I ought to get max MPH and if I wasn't propped right and ran on up to say 6000 my speed should fall off cause the HP (that turns the prop) fell off.......but you gotta ask yourself how'd I get to 6000 if that were the case?
Well, that's not the case. My current engine is rated 5000-5500. But If I am running a prop that will allow me to go to 6000 (or more with another prop of less pitch) the boat speed keeps increasing as the RPM's increase.
Since the load on the prop (from the boat's water resistance and weight) should be about equal at those speeds (45-50 MPH), if the engine started having breathing problems and the torque fell off above the peak, then the boat should start slowing down, wouldn't you think?
Just Curious.
Mark