Free: Contests & Raffles.
I sure hope for your sake it’s something simple. Sounds like you got a good rep so that’s a huge win. Something I just thought of, is it possible it’s the wrong rotation starter? However it plays out keep us posted
They're using something similar to the suredrive, not sure if the brand. It came from Italy. That setup is pretty standard up here when you get into the 200+ hp continuous duty ratings.As an aside, I put a suredrive in my own boat when Iput in a new gearbox for exactly the same reason you describe. Original setup was a damper plate, springs were broken. Had to have the folks at Suredrive custom build my hub center to match my oddball engine and gear combo (definitely not an of the shelf part). Expensive, but worth it.
I know diesel electric is commonplace in ships and trains, but that's largely to let engines run where they're most efficient and let the electrics buffer the ups and downs. So I'm not sure where this technology is supposed to (as in the article) cut fuel costs by 50-60% Now a nice Mr. Fusion on the other hand.
Quote from: EnglishSetter on Yesterday at 01:54:55 PMI know diesel electric is commonplace in ships and trains, but that's largely to let engines run where they're most efficient and let the electrics buffer the ups and downs. So I'm not sure where this technology is supposed to (as in the article) cut fuel costs by 50-60% Now a nice Mr. Fusion on the other hand. Good observation, and I share your skepticism. The main benefit that I keep hearing about is the ability to run under electric power during extended low power consumption activities - ie., slow speed trolling and hauling back most longline gear. To be fair, this low power operation accounts for roughly 80% of my own boat's annual run time. However, I think the fuel saved by periodically running a 30kw genset at max efficiency to charge the battery bank (this is the main idea - run a smaller diesel more efficiently, less often) vs just idling along with a traditional main engine will be negligible. The thing most often forgotten in these schemes is the power loss due to multiple energy conversions. Going from rotational power to electricity, then back again to rotational power is accepting two large conversion losses.I may be wrong about the overall viability. Fishing styles, gear types, relative efficiency of the main vs genset at low power outputs, all come into effect. There may be a situation where this makes a lot of sense. I can't yet see it for my operation, or Jeff's.However, if nobody ever experimented with technology, we'd still be sharing pics of our hunts on cave walls.