Re: Let's talk fuel economy
Oh no -- the dreaded fuel economy debate. If you have to worry about it don't by a boat. There is no comparison between economy on a boat and economy with a car, truck, airplane, weed wacker, or lawn mower. They all serve very different purposes. A car rarely sees more than 2000 rpm at highway speed while a boat engine is over 3000 rpm most of the time and regularly sees 4000 - 4800 for long periods. Friction caused by water means the boat is dealing with the most resistance nearly all of the time. While cars and trucks have transmissions to get you up to speed, a boat has one gear and it must not only get the boat on plane but it must also prevent lugging the engine at wide open throttle and it must also prevent over reving at wide open throttle. That gear is not the gear in the lower unit but rather the propeller in combination with that gear. Too much pitch and the engine lugs, requires too much throttle opening and fuel economy suffers as does engine life. To little pitch and the engine over revs which can destroy it and while doing so also burns more fuel than necessary. As for boat fuel economy, there are a couple ways to look at it. A bigger engine loafing is a longer lasting engine and only marginally less economical than a small engine working its guts out to maintain any respectable speed. While you may not want a 50 mph boat, you may want to cruise with five or six people and that little engine will struggle to get on plane and you will need to apply more throttle to maintain cruise speed. If you are getting the impression there is no cut and dry answer to your question you'd be right. Generally (and very generally) the smaller engine will provide slightly better economy than a V6 or V8 but that all depends on the boat it's installed in. It boils down to the level of performance you are after and how you look at resale value. The small engine boats are generally entry level boats and people soon realize they want something better so they opt for the V6 or V8. In my view, the V6 is a great compromise between economy, performance and resale.