I was away from home for about six weeks - so the boat sat unused.
got back and ran it a few days ago.
started fine, ran great for about 10 miles and then - whoosh -
lost power, and wouldn't get above 3,000 rpms.
played around with the primer bulb,
determined that the VST was not running low
so figured the problem was the HP pump screen.
but I could still *****, so I did that for a few hours.
On the way home, I was able to make ~3800 rpms and keep the boat on plane
I noted that the NMEA display was showing atrocious fuel economy:
,
So at 2,126 engine hours, I opened up the VST:
(Had not been done since October 2014 @ 1050 hours)
Today its back together, boat back in the water, running great
and the MPG is showing normally:
So - point of the story.
as I see it:
- the clogged HP pump screen was reducing rail pressure
- the ECM increased the injector "on" time to obtain rpms
and then the ECM via CL/NMEA 2000 output reported an "assumed" fuel flow
which was actually incorrect.
got back and ran it a few days ago.
started fine, ran great for about 10 miles and then - whoosh -
lost power, and wouldn't get above 3,000 rpms.
played around with the primer bulb,
determined that the VST was not running low
so figured the problem was the HP pump screen.
but I could still *****, so I did that for a few hours.
On the way home, I was able to make ~3800 rpms and keep the boat on plane
I noted that the NMEA display was showing atrocious fuel economy:
,
So at 2,126 engine hours, I opened up the VST:
(Had not been done since October 2014 @ 1050 hours)
Today its back together, boat back in the water, running great
and the MPG is showing normally:
So - point of the story.
as I see it:
- the clogged HP pump screen was reducing rail pressure
- the ECM increased the injector "on" time to obtain rpms
and then the ECM via CL/NMEA 2000 output reported an "assumed" fuel flow
which was actually incorrect.
Comment