do diesels fit in a 28
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do diesels fit in a 28
Hi, I'm new to the site. I am rebuilding an abused 28 bertram. It is a 1984 witch has a larger engine room [in height] and larger shafts [11/4"].
Does anyone know what diesels will fit into this boat. I was told the cummins remans / or the volvos pentas were a good fit. I am rebuilding the bulkheads and installing new engine stringers. I'm not sure if i will go gas or diesel , but i dont want to install the stringers if they will not accomadate a diesel. The volvo or cummins are said to cost about 13,000 each. Thanks gary.
Does anyone know what diesels will fit into this boat. I was told the cummins remans / or the volvos pentas were a good fit. I am rebuilding the bulkheads and installing new engine stringers. I'm not sure if i will go gas or diesel , but i dont want to install the stringers if they will not accomadate a diesel. The volvo or cummins are said to cost about 13,000 each. Thanks gary.
Re: do diesels fit in a 28
I have twin Cummins 210's in my '83 B28 FBC.
I was not involved in the installation but the only alteration that appears to have been needed is a couple of risers in the engine hatches
to accomodate the coolant reservoir cap(s).
A quick search of yachtworld.com shows a smattering of diesels.
Yachtworld Listings
I paid nearly twice as much for diesel powered B28.
I felt I would benefit from the economy and safety during ownership and recover much of the cost at resale.
(If and when I decide to move up to a 31)
I replaced my cabin bulkheads and cockpit panels this spring and would be glad to help any way I can.
I tried to take helpful pictures along the way. Just drop me an email if you like.
I was not involved in the installation but the only alteration that appears to have been needed is a couple of risers in the engine hatches
to accomodate the coolant reservoir cap(s).
A quick search of yachtworld.com shows a smattering of diesels.
Yachtworld Listings
I paid nearly twice as much for diesel powered B28.
I felt I would benefit from the economy and safety during ownership and recover much of the cost at resale.
(If and when I decide to move up to a 31)
I replaced my cabin bulkheads and cockpit panels this spring and would be glad to help any way I can.
I tried to take helpful pictures along the way. Just drop me an email if you like.
I can tell you that Steyr 6 cylinder will fit in a 1980 28. Using the existing running gear which is 1 1/8 shafts. Came from factory with merc 233's and velvet 71c. Switching to a ZF gear with down angle neccesitates some minor mods to fit the tranny back through rear bulkhead. Also needed spacers to fit between ouput shaft and coupler. My height from engine bed to hatch at the aft end of compartment only 22 inches. Placing the engines all the way aft is the only way this engine would fit. If I had put longer shafts in then the forward placement of the engines would not have allowed the hatches to close. Pretty sure I have the small engine room configuration. Bruce is the authority here on the Steyr engines and I am sure he will drop a post.
These are high speed diesels which allows use of smaller diameter shaft. I am not sure if 1 1/4 is enough for a low speed and torque cummins. My gear ratio and prop thus far to specs are also unchanged. I am sure the other faithful will chime in on your question.
Wish I could give you true performance specs but the boat is not finished or in the water yet. I will say the engine and gear combo weighs 733 lbs per side. Much lighter than small blocks. Switching to diesel also means I do not have to cut the glass tank out of boat. Read thread on ethanol if you are not following me. Replacement fiberglass ethanol resistant tank is 3600 plus labor. Good luck and sounds like you have a lot to think about. My repower contemplation is over. Just need to button things up and see if the old girl still floats. Kevin
These are high speed diesels which allows use of smaller diameter shaft. I am not sure if 1 1/4 is enough for a low speed and torque cummins. My gear ratio and prop thus far to specs are also unchanged. I am sure the other faithful will chime in on your question.
Wish I could give you true performance specs but the boat is not finished or in the water yet. I will say the engine and gear combo weighs 733 lbs per side. Much lighter than small blocks. Switching to diesel also means I do not have to cut the glass tank out of boat. Read thread on ethanol if you are not following me. Replacement fiberglass ethanol resistant tank is 3600 plus labor. Good luck and sounds like you have a lot to think about. My repower contemplation is over. Just need to button things up and see if the old girl still floats. Kevin
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- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 13:46
- Location: Hampton Bays, NY
I have the Yanmar 170'S in my 28 . It's not a rocket ship, 17 to 19 kts. at
2900 RPM is the speed I cruise at fully loaded for fishing. 3400 RPM'S is WOT.
Out here because of conditions I can't always cruise at that speed.
Bill Fuller has the 240'S in his 28. Maybe he'll chime in.
I'm very pleased with the 170"S.
If you have any questions PM or E-Mail me.
2900 RPM is the speed I cruise at fully loaded for fishing. 3400 RPM'S is WOT.
Out here because of conditions I can't always cruise at that speed.
Bill Fuller has the 240'S in his 28. Maybe he'll chime in.
I'm very pleased with the 170"S.
If you have any questions PM or E-Mail me.
Jim
1975 28 FBC
1975 28 FBC
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I had the 170s in my 28 and with full tower, generator and the full load, we were lucky to make 16 kts. We never paid attention to the rpms, only the pyrometers and while the fuel burn was very miserly, the boat was very underpowered. At WOT, the boat handled beautifully so while I would recommend the Yanmars, I would suggest you go for the 240s.
They are a direct replacement.
They are a direct replacement.
- In Memory Walter K
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- Hyena Love
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For Sure
For sure - Yanmar 240's and Cummins 4 bangers fit with, at most, minor modifications to the hatches.
Not sure how anyone got inline 6 Cummins in there.
Story I heard was that B28's with diesel from the factory have bigger boxes as do the later years.
Yanmar 240's- 2900 rpm (per the tachs) is 29 mph. 3400 is 34 mph. Flat water, no real load.
And here is the kicker - my tachs are roughly 160 low at wot. So its 34 mph at roughly 3270 rpm. T
Not sure how anyone got inline 6 Cummins in there.
Story I heard was that B28's with diesel from the factory have bigger boxes as do the later years.
Yanmar 240's- 2900 rpm (per the tachs) is 29 mph. 3400 is 34 mph. Flat water, no real load.
And here is the kicker - my tachs are roughly 160 low at wot. So its 34 mph at roughly 3270 rpm. T
- Capt. Mike Holmes
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- Location: Freeport, Texas
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Lil' Bert
Ernest, sounds like it's running better than you expected - great news. I would certainly have trouble keeping up with you on a long offshore run. I wondered, also, about how you cram 6BT's in a 28, but i saw one advertised in Boats & Harbors that claimed to have John Deere diesels, and the Deere doesn't make any small marine engines that I know of.
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