Re: [Amel] SM2K Yanmar RPM
Danny and Yvonne SIMMS
Hi Mark, just to add to the ideas. I have spent many years around diesel engines in a variety of applications. A regular maintenance need is injector servicing and a dark smoky exhaust is one indicator that it is time for that service. Fuel is driven through the injectors into the combustion chamber at very high pressure though a small nozzle. Over time this nozzle wears and increases in diameter leading to over fueling and a smoky exhaust, particularly under load.
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I would expect a performance decrease as well as the smoke. Injector servincing is not a big deal. You need a competent tradesman with the right tools to remove them and a specialist service centre to sevice them.. Regards Danny SM 299 Ocean Pearl (NZ) --- On Thu, 31/3/11, Mark <markghayden@...> wrote:
From: Mark <markghayden@...> Subject: Re: [Amel] SM2K Yanmar RPM To: amelyachtowners@... Date: Thursday, 31, March, 2011, 8:17 PM Thanks for the info. I'm current with all the filters, etc. The fact that my RPM's are within the same ballpark as when the previous owner acquired the boat from Amel is consistent with that. Are my RPM's in line with what I should be expecting? Or is there something about the application that makes the RPM's I'm getting OK. If my RPM's are as expected, I'd think there would be other owners who had been told the same thing as me. BTW, how can you tell if the autoprop reaches full pitch? Thanks in advance, Mark --- In amelyachtowners@..., Richard03801 <richard03801@...> wrote:
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