[C320-list] Fuel Gauges

Jeff Church jjemail at comcast.net
Tue May 1 20:01:22 PDT 2007


Mike,

I've had problems with my gauge. I turned the sender 90 degrees and that prevents it from hanging up on whatever it was hitting in the tank (the side of the tank or the baffle in the tank). I also bent the arm on the sender so that it would give a more accurate reading.

JeffC  
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Stan 
  To: C320-List 
  Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2007 9:50 PM
  Subject: Re: [C320-list] Fuel Gauges


  Hi mike,

  We are starting the seventh season (408 engine hours & 4700+ miles) with
  "Our Little Amusement" and the fuel gauge is still working fine.  My fuel
  consumption through the years averaged 0.45 to 0.6 Gal./Hr..  The range was
  dependant on sea conditions more so than RPM.  When the gauge reads 1/2 full
  I start thinking about topping it off.  Keeps the fuel fresh and provides a
  little piece of mind.

  I would be carefull running the tank too low.  Even at 0.4 gal./Hr., 40
  hours of running time would leave only three gallons in the tank.  Kind of
  low if you are in rolling seas.  You might start to suck air and any debris
  on the bottom of the tank will get stirred up into less fuel leading to a
  higher concentration of debris in the fuel which will clog filters at the
  most inopertune time.

  McLube!!!  Can't say enough about it.  I find a new use for it all the
  time.

  Vibration?  Really a well balanced system has no vibration.  It's probably
  an unbalanced prop or the shaft-engine alignment or both.  2000 RPM is too
  low to cruise the engine.  You're asking for the dreaded exhaust elbow
  carbonization.

  Stan
  "Our Little Amusement" #744


  On 5/1/07, mike hunter <popotladreaming at yahoo.com> wrote:
  >
  > How many of you have operational fuel gauges?  I have owned 2 Catalina's
  > and neither of them have had gauges that work.  I have heard this is common
  > for all boats.  The manual states fuel consumption at ½ gallon per hour at
  > 2800 RPMs, I'm rarely up this high, so I figure it is safe to go 40 hours on
  > the 20-gallon tank.  I guess what I'm really asking is – is it worth
  > replacing the sending unit, gauge, etc., if it's going to only last a short
  > while; or should I just continue to guestimate?
  >
  > While I'm sort of on the subject of RPMs, my boat has a "sweet spot" at
  > around 2000 RPMs, which pushes it along at around 4.5 knots.  When it gets
  > above that, I feel a small vibration at my feet.  How much vibration is
  > normal?
  >
  > I also have to share my joy with the results of McLube Sailkote.  Before
  > Sailkote it would take everything I had to get the main sail ¾ up the mast
  > and the last ¼ was tough even with the winch.  Now I can pull it all the way
  > to the top without straining.  I also applied it to the shift lever and
  > throttle lever shafts at the pedestal and talk about smooth.  Awesome
  > product!!!
  >
  > Thanks!
  >
  > Mike
  > #637
  >
  >
  > ---------------------------------
  > Ahhh...imagining that irresistible "new car" smell?
  > Check outnew cars at Yahoo! Autos.
  >



  -- 
  Stan
  "Our Little Amusement"
  C320  #744
  N 36 03' 15"
  W 114 48' 16"
  __/)__/)__/)__/)__


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