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Discussion starter · #662 ·
Hoplite , please report if the engine performs fully normal at sea trail . Hopefully yes and than it was a good learning for us all . Hopefully we all fought the devil in your boat and all will be fine ;-)

I will let everyone know once I can make some time for a proper sea trial. Got a bunch of family stuff this weekend and work needs me 0500-2300 for most of the week. Hopefully next Saturday the weather will be clear enough for me to do a proper run with it.
 
Discussion starter · #663 ·
This weekend's weather report was not looking good so I got everything together and went down this morning before work and took her out for about an hour today. It felt much better than before and I ran her at full throttle with no apparent bogging down or other issues for most of the hour I was out for. I think I can call this fixed. Perhaps when she was brand new it went a bit harder and faster but for a 27 year old engine and boat I think this was okay. One engine and with a dry weight of at least 6,500 lbs. she's a bit of a fat bottomed girl anyways so I don't expect it to be any sense of a speedster.

Anyways, some good music then to end this thread with.
 
This makes me so happy! Glad you stick with it and didn’t sell and start with another boat. Enjoy it, I hope you have a great summer! Planning on my first trip to Hawaii next April

This weekend's weather report was not looking good so I got everything together and went down this morning before work and took her out for about an hour today. It felt much better than before and I ran her at full throttle with no apparent bogging down or other issues for most of the hour I was out for. I think I can call this fixed. Perhaps when she was brand new it went a bit harder and faster but for a 27 year old engine and boat I think this was okay. One engine and with a dry weight of at least 6,500 lbs. she's a bit of a fat bottomed girl anyways so I don't expect it to be any sense of a speedster.

Anyways, some good music then to end this thread with.
 
Is his boat really that heavy that it wouldn't have a top speed of 28 30 mph. Or is it because of the condition of the engine
it should absolutely go mid-20's or higher, it's not that heavy of a boat and a B3 has plenty of lift to get the rear end up and out of the water. I'm also curious to hear current top speed/RPM after the latest valve findings
 
Discussion starter · #674 ·
Per the manufacturer she has a 6,500 lbs dry weight. Gasoline is about 6lbs per gallon and I had about a half tank and with a 40 gallon fresh water tank which when full is another 320ish lbs. With all the other random kit I have aboard plus the weight of people on board I would estimate she's sitting in the water now as least 8,000 lbs. to get underway. The engine is rated when it was brand new at 330 horsepower. With the engine and trim tabs set right and the ocean conditions smoothing out enough for me a bit I was able to get her to rev up to about 4000 for the fasted short run but it was happiest in the sea state that day holding around 3500 RPM's at about 19-22 knots.

Googling what the top speed should be for this boat I couldn't get any clear answer and the numbers were between 26-43 knots and it looks like they got faster the newer they are and there were other variables such as twin engines and other things to find a comparable for my own boat. I did a bit of studying and found and equation created by Naval Architect George Crouch which claims to calculate the theoretical speed of a boat using this equation: S = √(P / D) × C. S = Speed, P = Engine Horsepower, D = Displacement, and C is Crouch's constant of 150. So for my 270 in its current configuration it calculates as S = √(330 / 8000) × 150; which makes S = 30.46 MPH which translates to a theoretical top speed of 26.46 knots. So I think I can say it's good.
 
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