I had posted this on another thread, but since the conversation seems to be continuing here, the weather looked pretty good on Thursday about 3pm so we headed out on the big lake. Still pretty calm.
We had about 3 miles visibility, and the fog horns were running at the pierhead. I only saw maybe 4 boats all day. Maybe it was because of a weekday or maybe the foggy conditions, but 3 miles visibility is not bad at all.
I got a chance to do a few 5 mile runs for fuel mileage purposes; using different throttle and trim tab settings. Maybe ran 25 miles in all.
I got at best around .9mpg, and at worst, about .5mpg - at different crusing speeds. I didn't even try to get a fix on WOT as it is usually so short, and well, kind of useless information.
But there were some interesting results:
At 3,000 RPM, boat got about 15mph and about .4mpg. At 3,400 RPM, the boat was doing about 20mph and .9MPG, which was the best of the day. At 3,600 RPM, boat got about .5mpg and about 23mph.
At 3,000 RPM the bow ran a bit high. At 3,400 RPM, with those big 5ft wide trim tabs on my boat, at about 50% down, the bow settled down and became the best mileage.
This is kind of a bit counter-intuitive, because logic says that with the trim tabs deployed, it causes more drag. But the deployed tabs cause the boat to run at a much better angle, and especially with inboards, the thrust angle becomes closer to parallel. So the loss of drag in the hull and better thrust angle of the props more than makes up for the increased drag of the tabs, me thinks.
The 3,000 RPM mileage was the worst, and even though the boat was on plane, it seemed to be plowing through the water rather than planing at a good angle. I don't think I got the boat up out of the water enough.
But this was the first time I have tried this, and is only possible since I added NMEA2000 fuel level sensors (not fuel flow sensors), which allow me to see actual gallons left in the tank after each run. What I did was to throttle down at minimum speed, so to keep the boat from rocking from side to side, run for a few seconds, then take a fuel reading. The sensors gave me an accuracy probably +/- a half gallon, much more accurate than a standard fuel gauge.
There were some hysteresis issues with the fuel sensors, but I was able to get it pretty darn close, I think.
Then I made a run for 5 miles, then settled the boat back down again and took another reading.
Now, there might be some error in the reading with the boat still under power, but it seems more accurate than rocking the boat side to side. And since I put the boat into the same state each time, I figure the error will be offset the same each time.
Previously, I concentrated on RPM without as much concern about tab settings, but it appears now that the boat is quite sensitive to trim tab setting, so I need to make a few more runs with different tab settings.
I still want to put in fuel flow metering, but with the EIF fuel flow system I have, I can only use the one made by FloScan. And I don't have the dash room for two 3.5" gauges; at least not yet.
I did find that I had to raise the dinghy on the mounts a bit as when coming off plane, the bottom of the dinghy kind of whacks the incoming back wave. Also I think the boat still squats a bit when coming off plane.