I had the unfortunate experience of the tensioner pulley on my new engine seizing, which threw the belt and therefore the raw water pump stopped. It doesn't take long for the coolant temp to sky rocket but fortunately I was standing at the helm and saw the temp spike. Yes I had an alarm but I didn't hear it as my pilot house is pretty noisy at full speed. My boat is primarily used for fishing with cruising in its future.
I posted a similar thread on another site and was surprised at the number of people that also experienced the same event. Probably six different people and engine manufacturers. Unfortunately one person fried his engine.
I was surprised that this was such a common problem. My engine only had about 600 hours.
While repairing the engine we learned that the engine computer could be set up to derate, think safe or guardian mode, so that if an overheat temp was reached then we could tell the engine to derate or slow down. On my boat I cruise at 2000 rpm and when we derate the engine slows to 1600 rpm so that you'll definitely know something is wrong even if you don't hear or see the alarm.
That feature worked this year when the impeller failed, and the coolant temp started to rise. We set the derate limit at 199 degrees. As soon as the boat slowed down, I knew I had a problem.
Unfortunately, neither my manufacturer nor the tech that commissioned the engine had either informed me of the derate feature or set it up.
My engine is a Scania, and my boat is located in the NE of US. Why a Scania? It was either that or a Cummins and I thought at the time that the Scania would add to the resale value. It's an engine used in a lot of commercial boats. Plus, when I used to travel overseas, I would see Scania all over the place in buses and trucks.
How many other owners have had failure of the tensioner pulley?
What other engines have computers that have the derate feature?
I posted a similar thread on another site and was surprised at the number of people that also experienced the same event. Probably six different people and engine manufacturers. Unfortunately one person fried his engine.
I was surprised that this was such a common problem. My engine only had about 600 hours.
While repairing the engine we learned that the engine computer could be set up to derate, think safe or guardian mode, so that if an overheat temp was reached then we could tell the engine to derate or slow down. On my boat I cruise at 2000 rpm and when we derate the engine slows to 1600 rpm so that you'll definitely know something is wrong even if you don't hear or see the alarm.
That feature worked this year when the impeller failed, and the coolant temp started to rise. We set the derate limit at 199 degrees. As soon as the boat slowed down, I knew I had a problem.
Unfortunately, neither my manufacturer nor the tech that commissioned the engine had either informed me of the derate feature or set it up.
My engine is a Scania, and my boat is located in the NE of US. Why a Scania? It was either that or a Cummins and I thought at the time that the Scania would add to the resale value. It's an engine used in a lot of commercial boats. Plus, when I used to travel overseas, I would see Scania all over the place in buses and trucks.
How many other owners have had failure of the tensioner pulley?
What other engines have computers that have the derate feature?