All depends on how far and how fast you want to get there.
You're probably looking at somewhere in the 2.5-3 gallons a mile at cruise (1950 -2000 rpms) which is probably in the 28kt area.
The C18 Carolina charter boats do not like to run their CATS over 1650-1750 rpms. I doubt those rpm levels are going to get it done on a much heavier Hatteras hull.
Was talking to a friend who repowered his 60' Carolina custom from 800hp 3406e's to 1150hp CAT c18's. So he added 700hp with almost no additional engine weight except a couple hundred lbs for heavier gears.
Not sure what the cruise rpm's are but the old cruise speed was 27kts, he's now cruising the same rpm's doing 33/34kts at the same fuel burn per hour as the old engines, including adding the weight of a Seakeeper.
He had almost 8,000 hours on the 3406e's so he must not be running them very hard.
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Not sure what the cruise rpm's are but the old cruise speed was 27kts, he's now cruising the same rpm's doing 33/34kts at the same fuel burn per hour as the old engines, including adding the weight of a Seakeeper.
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20 year newer technology, same engine weight while producing 44% more horse power, gear reduction change from 1.5 to 1.75. 5 bladed Veems vs 3 bladed Michigans. Replaced the tanks and built new foam cockpit deck, foam cockpit bulkhead and mezzanine, etc, they dropped a lot of weight. Also blasted off 20 years of bottom paint while it was in the shop.
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