Originally Posted By: Nick R
Kind of curious, simply because depending on where we move, we may end up getting a boat. If we move to Ohio near Lake Erie we pretty much definitely would be. That's beside the point though.
It seems to me, with boat engines you pretty much would end up running WOT or near WOT all the time to get places. Is this pretty accurate? How do those engines hold up over time? Especially say the car engines stuck in a boat, like the GM 4.3L V6 that appears to be ubiquitous as boat engines. How do you run your boat?
Depends a lot on the boat. Ours has twin 7.4L mercs, and it easily comes up on plane at half throttle. 35 mph is an easy cruise at around 3000 rpm. Anything beyond that just burns more fuel. The engines in ours have almost 900 hrs and run excellent.
Kind of curious, simply because depending on where we move, we may end up getting a boat. If we move to Ohio near Lake Erie we pretty much definitely would be. That's beside the point though.
It seems to me, with boat engines you pretty much would end up running WOT or near WOT all the time to get places. Is this pretty accurate? How do those engines hold up over time? Especially say the car engines stuck in a boat, like the GM 4.3L V6 that appears to be ubiquitous as boat engines. How do you run your boat?
Depends a lot on the boat. Ours has twin 7.4L mercs, and it easily comes up on plane at half throttle. 35 mph is an easy cruise at around 3000 rpm. Anything beyond that just burns more fuel. The engines in ours have almost 900 hrs and run excellent.