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Ok, I can either buy a 2001 alh with 200,000+ miles (automatic) with harness ecm and throttle minus starter and alternator for 850 or a 1999 Jetta with over 360,000 miles manual trans complete car for 500 running, driving. Both need oil pans replaced. Which one you guys think I should buy?


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I think you'll find that the 99 has an ahu engine and not an alh. The changeover happened at 99.5 and the ahu, while not a bad engine, has nowhere near the aftermarket support that an alh will have.

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I understand that. I'm building for the just in case I want to mode.

The boat I'm planning to build has a 30' hull length and 8'6" beam with a flat bottom and a 7-inch hull draft unloaded and 11-inch loaded to max. Recommended power is 150hp to plane. The 27 foot model that was built only used a 115hp Evinrude ETEC outboard to plane. Top speed was 34mph and cruise was 30mph with an economy cruise at 22mph. Most of my speeds will be around the 7 to 10 knot range.
That’s surprisingly low amount of power to plane (at least I think so) any idea what your boat weighs?


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I always considered the heavy flyweel to be there to help absorb torque vibrations and allow smoother idle. In a boat you have an intermediate switch that kills the motor for a split second while switching gears.

Originally wired into a dizzy but ill wire it into my ip.

This is how mercury i/o are designed, im not sure about his velvet drive.

If you were around Atlanta ga i know of a ship yard full of old Chrysler velvets.
 
I always considered the heavy flyweel to be there to help absorb torque vibrations and allow smoother idle. In a boat you have an intermediate switch that kills the motor for a split second while switching gears.

Originally wired into a dizzy but ill wire it into my ip.

This is how mercury i/o are designed, im not sure about his velvet drive.

If you were around Atlanta ga i know of a ship yard full of old Chrysler velvets.
The velvet drive uses no shift interrupt. It uses wet clutches to either go forward or reverse. I needed replacement mounts for it and searched intensively to find them. The yard you know of probably has lots of them
Lol.


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Have you ran the boat at 10 kts before? I have a narrower boat, lighter and 21 ft on the water (26 ft over all not counting swim platfrom) and at 7 to 10 knots im pointing to the sky. My hull speed is around 7 mph...yours may be closer to 10 depending on your l.o.w. I'm thinking you have a planing hull but maybe you have a semi planing hull?

Either way something to consider. My boat at 8 or 9 knots mph is pushing major wake and not making any friends from smaller vessels.
 
The velvet drive uses no shift interrupt. It uses wet clutches to either go forward or reverse. I needed replacement mounts for it and searched intensively to find them. The yard you know of probably has lots of them
Lol.


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I wish i had an inboard. I chose my boat simply because it was on the trailer i wanted. Whike an i/o is more efficient the strength of a velevet is impossible to beat.
 
The velvet drive uses no shift interrupt. It uses wet clutches to either go forward or reverse. I needed replacement mounts for it and searched intensively to find them. The yard you know of probably has lots of them
Lol.


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Lake lanier marine. Im sure they ship. His parts are high but he will have what no one else will have.
 
That’s surprisingly low amount of power to plane (at least I think so) any idea what your boat weighs?


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Keep in mind that I have yet to build the boat. The estimate is 7000-7500lbs for the completed boat and 10,000lbs roughly load with full tanks ready for a week away. The 27' that was built was built light and simple. I am planning to keep mine to the same standard to keep weight down. I'm hoping with full tanks and a weeks supplies to come in around 9000lbs. I'll be running minimum electronics. My plumbing system will be basic along with the galley set up.

I always considered the heavy flyweel to be there to help absorb torque vibrations and allow smoother idle. In a boat you have an intermediate switch that kills the motor for a split second while switching gears.

Originally wired into a dizzy but ill wire it into my ip.

This is how mercury i/o are designed, im not sure about his velvet drive.

If you were around Atlanta ga i know of a ship yard full of old Chrysler velvets.
You're right about the heavy flywheel smoothing things up, but the 1.9TDIs are pretty smooth as is.

I'll be running a Mercruiser Alpha or Bravo stern drive. I will have to figure out the interrupter switch situation. Some people that have done the conversion say the diesel idles low enough to allow smooth shifting. If I'm not mistaken, the TDI idles around 600rpm where the gassers I/Os idle around 750 to 800rpm. The fuel cut off switch for the IP could be wired to the interrupt switch. It's been 20+ years since I have laid hand on a Mercruiser.



The velvet drive uses no shift interrupt. It uses wet clutches to either go forward or reverse. I needed replacement mounts for it and searched intensively to find them. The yard you know of probably has lots of them
Lol.


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No, the Velvets don't use intrupt switches. Those clutches will last a good long while with regular maintenace.


I wish i had an inboard. I chose my boat simply because it was on the trailer i wanted. Whike an i/o is more efficient the strength of a velevet is impossible to beat.
I don't know about efficiency but I agree that the Velvets can be strong.
 
Lake lanier marine. Im sure they ship. His parts are high but he will have what no one else will have.
You posted as I was making my other post. I know that area. I think I know the place you speak of. Isn't it located just north of the lake? I can't remember what the area is called, or is it the one located in Lanier? There's two I believe. They may be related.
 
They are almost 2 hours from me, ive only been there once. I couldn't tell you where it is located in relation to lake Lanier, only that is is close. The county is on him to downsize, so right now parts may be cheaper than later. The firemarshall is on him pretty bad.

If you google lake Lanier marine liquidators youll see him.


On the carver yacht owners website a memeber named hardchines convetred his carver 26 to a diesel. Removed the 350 and dropped on a little isuzu from a reefer unit. Maybe 50 hp tops. He also added a near 800 lbs diesel marine generator.

Being its a low reving long stroke diesel he doesn't plane. He may hit a max of 12 mph. He just puts thousands of miles at a little over 6 mph. He had to add basically small fins to the bottom of his boat to make her ride straight. It helped but it also made her harder to turn. He has bow thrusters now to help turn when docking.

He added the kill switch due to hard shifting in his alpha 2. I've heard others say they didn't need it.

I plan on using my 350 marine flywheel for the weight as I've heard the bhw is rough at certian rpms after the bs delete.

But i will also be adding the kill switch just in case that heavy flyweel doesn't drop rpm fast enough. Usually switching between gears isn't needed quickly but when trying to load or unload on the trailer or docking, especially in wind or current or both, its required.
 
They are almost 2 hours from me, ive only been there once. I couldn't tell you where it is located in relation to lake Lanier, only that is is close. The county is on him to downsize, so right now parts may be cheaper than later. The firemarshall is on him pretty bad.

If you google lake Lanier marine liquidators youll see him.


On the carver yacht owners website a memeber named hardchines convetred his carver 26 to a diesel. Removed the 350 and dropped on a little isuzu from a reefer unit. Maybe 50 hp tops. He also added a near 800 lbs diesel marine generator.

Being its a low reving long stroke diesel he doesn't plane. He may hit a max of 12 mph. He just puts thousands of miles at a little over 6 mph. He had to add basically small fins to the bottom of his boat to make her ride straight. It helped but it also made her harder to turn. He has bow thrusters now to help turn when docking.

He added the kill switch due to hard shifting in his alpha 2. I've heard others say they didn't need it.

I plan on using my 350 marine flywheel for the weight as I've heard the bhw is rough at certian rpms after the bs delete.

But i will also be adding the kill switch just in case that heavy flyweel doesn't drop rpm fast enough. Usually switching between gears isn't needed quickly but when trying to load or unload on the trailer or docking, especially in wind or current or both, its required.
I have a 20’ cuddy with a 305 Chevy and alpha 1. I can say, when my interupter switch needed adjustment pulling it out of forward or reverse was very difficult. Even with a low idle I would think it’s necessary.


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What are you guys doing about gauges? Ive heard you can get an app to display your iat, oil pressure, water temp, and rpms on an android. Ive also read that it won't display egts which i consider equally important.

Do i run 2 egt gauges and 1 probe or do i need 2 probes? Can i wire them to a switch perhaps?

I have two helms so i hope to habe one water proof case for the bridge and a cheap one below.
 
What are you guys doing about gauges? Ive heard you can get an app to display your iat, oil pressure, water temp, and rpms on an android. Ive also read that it won't display egts which i consider equally important.

Do i run 2 egt gauges and 1 probe or do i need 2 probes? Can i wire them to a switch perhaps?

I have two helms so i hope to habe one water proof case for the bridge and a cheap one below.
I’m pretty sure one probe will only run one gauge at a time. I could be wrong though. My plan is two probes, two gauges as I have a flybridge as well. I’m going to use original gauges and sending units for oil and water temp.


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What are you guys doing about gauges? Ive heard you can get an app to display your iat, oil pressure, water temp, and rpms on an android. Ive also read that it won't display egts which i consider equally important.

Do i run 2 egt gauges and 1 probe or do i need 2 probes? Can i wire them to a switch perhaps?

I have two helms so i hope to habe one water proof case for the bridge and a cheap one below.
I will only have a pilot house. The upper level will be for solar and storing a kayak or two. I'm keeping the roof low so I can do the Great Loop without having to detour due to low hanging structures such as bridges.

I'm planning on using aftermarket Faria marine gauges similar to Autometer. EGTs will need to be monitored to keep heat low in the engine room or under the dog house. What ever gauge you go with for EGTs, ask if they can read from the same probe. To be honest, it probably wouldn't hurt to run two probes for redundancy and to have something as a secondary in case you suspect a bad gauge.

Faria gauges aren't really expensive. Shop around for the best prices regardless of manufacturer. Most auto gauge manufacturers have amarine line up. I know VDO and Autometer have them.
https://fariabeede.com/2-pages/products_marine.php

I also plan to use a bluetooth/wifi ScanTool and a tablet computer as a back up. Maybe even my main gauges.
https://www.scantool.net/

I would almost be willing to get a program to keep onboard to retune the engine, if needed. Malone is pretty great from the get-go, even without having to dyno your engine. That's from them being experienced and knowledgeable, but I don't have to tell you guys that.
 
Correct me if im wrong, but i think I've heard of sailboats doing the great loop?

I have a 26ft already. This boat is just for vacations and coastal beach trips. I also wanna explore jocasse. The sailboat is not something you set up for a day or even weekend
 
Correct me if im wrong, but i think I've heard of sailboats doing the great loop?

I have a 26ft already. This boat is just for vacations and coastal beach trips. I also wanna explore jocasse. The sailboat is not something you set up for a day or even weekend
Sailboats can do some of the great loop. Air draft an hull draft becomes an issue with sailboats. There's a lot of overhead obstacles that require the mast to be unstepped and carried on deck. The max hull draft is currently 4 foot in sections of the GL. A lot of sailboats run that deep and up to 6 foot or deeper. I looked at a heavy built 40 x 12 sailboat and it had a 7.5 foot draft to offset all the sail it carried. It was an older wooden Herreshoff.
 
Mine is a shoal draft with a Centerboard. A san juan 26.

It drafts less than 3 ft. The mast is a little over 30 in the air. It makes it a little tender but i don't ground often and can launch at most ramps. Not gonna raise or lower that mast easiky with one person unless you have good winches.
 
Mine is a shoal draft with a Centerboard. A san juan 26.

It drafts less than 3 ft. The mast is a little over 30 in the air. It makes it a little tender but i don't ground often and can launch at most ramps. Not gonna raise or lower that mast easiky with one person unless you have good winches.
Most of the people that I talk with on forums hire a boom truck to come out and lift the mast and lay on deck for them. It's sometimes cheaper than having a marina step the mast. I think the max air draft is around 15 feet in certain areas of the GL. It's due to some of the fixed brdges and no way to easily bypass them. I would have to look through my info and see if that's changed in the last few years.
 
I have a trailer with an electric winch mounted to the front about bow level. I hang two poles from each front cleat by each side of the front hatch and they are tied together to hold them in an a frame shape. Maybe 8 ft long
The which cable goes to the a frsme and it stands straight up in the air. Then the jib halyard attaches to the opposite side of the a frame and is pulled tight and secured.

I hit the winch button and raise or lower the mast.

I never break a sweat but it requires my trailer.

Still takes a few hours from start to finish with rigging and hanging outboard, boom, sails and such.

So im pretty much stuck on my hartwell.

The carver will be both faster and easier to launch at different lakes
 
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