rustybucket
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2013
- Messages
- 1,200
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 52' CONVERTIBLE (1983 - 1990)
I have enjoyed reading your posts,especially on the engines . Some people seem to think that the 8V92 engine is a hand grenade with the pin already pulled , sounds like you are getting good performance
Eh, they def have a bad rep in some circles. It's definitely 'cooler' to have the new electronic high hp engines, but I'm here to tell you, they break just as easily (more easily in some cases) than the detroits. Detroits are fairly simple engines compared to modern diesel engines in the fact that all they really need to run is air, oil and fuel. Of course new engines need all that stuff, but they also need an ECU, 50million sensors and a mile of wire.
They are heavy, some are loud (mine aren't bad at all) and some smoke and leak oil. I used to believe the old saying about all detroits leak oil and if they didn't they were out of oil, but several other owners on this site have proven that to be dead wrong. All engines can and will leak oil. It's about staying on top of the leaks when found and addressing any maintenance issues along the way. I was in a practically brand new viking with v16 mtu's a few months ago and they had diaper rags in several spots where the practically brand new engines were slobbering and leaking oil.
Detroits are not perfect, but there aren't many engines that are. New engines have their benefits and their drawbacks. The biggest benefit to newer engines is the amount of hours some guys are getting between rebuilds. A long lived high hp detroit may be 3k hours while a long lived cat may be 5-10k hours.
I used to think you should run away from a boat with detroits, but now I'm more inclined to run away from boats that have not been properly maintained, or ran overpropped/overloaded no matter what power they have.
Bottom line, any engine could live a long, healthy, happy service life, or it could blow up tomorrow. bent rods know no brands.
