Two Stroke Versus Four

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DJ

Guest
Re: Two Stroke Versus Four

There have been some posts here regarding the "commercial" use of some engines. I agree that commercial folks can be hard on equipment, however, in most cases they also maintain it. They have to, it's their livelihood.<br /><br />Actually, a commercial application is a recipe for good service. The engines are worked hard and usually run very often, if not every day. That is the best serviice to put an engine in to get a lot of hours, very quickly.<br /><br />What kills mechanical equipment is: lack of maintenance, lack of use, poor fuel (old). Just "lack" in general.<br /><br />Manufacturers can easily test for durability. The most difficult malodies to test for are the ravages of time and what is stated above.<br /><br />Just like the human body, we can try to maintain it but, it still gets old. ;)
 

JasonJ

Rear Admiral
Joined
Aug 20, 2001
Messages
4,163
Re: Two Stroke Versus Four

The Honda outboards are directly linked to their automoive brethren, sharing quite a bit of the parts. Reciprocating assemblies are the same, the 4 cylinder engines are essentially the same throughout except for the cam grinds, intake/exhaust configuration, and ECM burn on the injected motors. It isn't a bad thing, as the Honda automotive engines are all aluminum with floating cylinders. They are a natural choice for marinization, and not a bad choice. Honda makes some of the best engines, period. I think the only way you are going to get a better 4 stroke engine in an outboard is if BMW starts making four stroke outboards. I have faith in the new Merc Verado, but it will need to have a few years under its belt. The Yamahas and Suzukis are fine products as well, but Honda does have the best track record with its engines.<br /><br />I trust a used product that was used commercially more than I do a private party product that was used very little. Sitting is what kills mechanical devices, not products that are used consistently.
 

swist

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 1, 2004
Messages
678
Re: Two Stroke Versus Four

"The Honda outboards are directly linked to their automoive brethren, sharing quite a bit of the parts. Reciprocating assemblies are the same, the 4 cylinder engines are essentially the same throughout except for the cam grinds, intake/exhaust configuration, and ECM burn on the injected motors. It isn't a bad thing, as the Honda automotive engines are all aluminum with floating cylinders."<br /><br />I agree, and thus I reiterate my earlier point. In most cases, cars run at much lower RPM and do not experience anywhere near the load of a full boat going up on plane, so even if the engines are identical, and salt water wasn't an issue etc, etc, the applications are still very different.<br /><br />But if someone says they are running these things in marine environments for 1000s of hours are they are still reliable, then this is good news - it can only mean that the engines were overdesigned for auto use. And that is easy to believe - my car guy tells me it is very very unusual for a Honda car engine to just plain quit because of a fault of its own....
 
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