Need for Raiser elbow on Yanmar 315
Moderators: CaptPatrick, mike ohlstein, Bruce
Need for Raiser elbow on Yanmar 315
Hello,
After some time I'll finally get new engines and decided to go for Yanmar 315:s in my B31. I would just like to check if I need raiser elbows or if the standard elbow will do?
Thanks, Henrik
After some time I'll finally get new engines and decided to go for Yanmar 315:s in my B31. I would just like to check if I need raiser elbows or if the standard elbow will do?
Thanks, Henrik
- CaptPatrick
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Without knowing how you did the beds, I can't say for sure but Pats right that 98% of the time the standard down turned elbow is fine in the 31.
A good check is the bottom of the turbo outlet should be a minimum of 30.4 centimeters above the water line. Thats 12" for the metric challenged.
Even if you have surge tubes, mufflers or what have you.
Pats pic is of the old 6LY 315, not the 6LP 315. Turbo outlet height is different between the two.
A good check is the bottom of the turbo outlet should be a minimum of 30.4 centimeters above the water line. Thats 12" for the metric challenged.
Even if you have surge tubes, mufflers or what have you.
Pats pic is of the old 6LY 315, not the 6LP 315. Turbo outlet height is different between the two.
- CaptPatrick
- Founder/Admin
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- Joined: Jun 7th, '06, 14:25
- Location: 834 Scott Dr., LLANO, TX 78643 - 325.248.0809 bertram31@bertram31.com
Great engines. You won't regret it.
By the way, I think these engines were underestimated by a lot of folks.
There are more of them showing up on sites like Boat Diesel. com with a lot of hours. There was one guy who had 7700 hours on them with no rebuild. It was used commericially, which is a no no.
By the way, I think these engines were underestimated by a lot of folks.
There are more of them showing up on sites like Boat Diesel. com with a lot of hours. There was one guy who had 7700 hours on them with no rebuild. It was used commericially, which is a no no.
- In Memory Walter K
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walter it would be outright impossible to go 7700 hours on a 6lp. you have to remove the rubber band up front more then 4 times.and if you let it go , they break and the engine automaticly goes into self destruct mode.i have one on the floor in the shop and one on the shelf in storage.
capt.bob lico
bero13010473
bero13010473
If you have 7700 hours on a 6LP you should have replaced the timing belt 7 times, every 1100 hours.
I've got 3 6lp's with over 10k hours and at the last dealer meeting, there was one dealer who had over 20k in a commercial application.
Like anything, proper setup, care and the way its run is important.
I've got 3 6lp's with over 10k hours and at the last dealer meeting, there was one dealer who had over 20k in a commercial application.
Like anything, proper setup, care and the way its run is important.
bruce your one of the good honest marine mechanic .this is a very big yard and you tell some they are due for the timing belt change and they let it go.sometimes they win and for two last season sometimes they lose.the proplem is when is goes it goes big time."i told you so "only gets them pissed off at the yard.you are right at 1100 hours i was given ed the absolute maximum.this further illustrates what i was saying about maintenace between engines. the first minute you start a 6lp up the belt starts wearing as opposed to a caterpillar gear drive and non existense maintenance of that gear system. how about those that pretend to not know looking for a warantee issue "my engine is sluggest " did you change the timing belt "---"whats that !!! ". our labor is a $150.00 a hour plus 10% and 40% on parts this is a expensive procedure that must be included in your choice of repowered. incidently the steyr diesel (if your looking for lightweight is a much better built engine) at least the 2.0 data bus with let you know before there is a problem
capt.bob lico
bero13010473
bero13010473
bruce possibly a little visual if the lamebrain former topless dancer secretary wears her usual low cut blouse but thats not usually the topic with a whopping repair bill in your hand.thats why i am totaly confused for the last 10 years when somebody says service should determine what engine you choose on a yanmar/cummins/caterpillar in a 31 bertram.with a IQ. of 90 you could unscrew a oil filter/ fuel filter once a year on cummins/caterpillar/volvo .dump it in a plastic bag and refill filters and install. anything else would be warantee work in those first 1000 hours (quite a long time for the average boater)no high priced marine mechanic for valve timing/timing belt replacment/exhaust elbows/fan belts .thank god for yanmar it keeps kenny and willy the two diesel mechanics going the winter months.i can`t believe sombody cannot see the forest from the trees--------amen
capt.bob lico
bero13010473
bero13010473
Other than the yearly service and maintenance intervals on my Yanmar customers, I don't hear from them otherwise.thank god for yanmar it keeps kenny and willy the two diesel mechanics going the winter months
I'd starve if I depended on Yanmar service only.
Whats with the excessive service required in your parts?
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