{"id":10802,"date":"2010-03-26T14:00:14","date_gmt":"2010-03-26T19:00:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/setsail.com\/fpb-64-fuel-burn-tests\/"},"modified":"2010-03-26T14:00:14","modified_gmt":"2010-03-26T19:00:14","slug":"fpb-64-fuel-burn-tests","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/setsail.com\/fpb-64-fuel-burn-tests\/","title":{"rendered":"FPB 64 Fuel Burn Tests"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"FPB-64-1-Performance-103\"<\/p>\n

We’re starting to get into the meat of the sea trials, checking cruise speed against RPM, fuel burn rates, and motion. The screen above is one of 16 available from the NMEA 2000 Maretron display. This system is tied to the Deere engine monitor and amongst other things shows fuel burn, mileage, and in this case engine RPM and speed over ground from the GPS. Of particular interest is the fuel burn data.<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

\"FPB-64-1-Performance-102\"<\/p>\n

All of these screens were photograph just off Whangarei Heads, theoretically outside the current area, in 16 to 18 knots of true wind speed. The boat is a little under half load, close to where she would average on a long ocean passage. Hydraulics and alternators are off, so the data reported is not real world, but does give us a baseline to compare to the calculations.<\/p>\n

The first screen is running with the wind dead astern. The second is with the wind on the nose. There was a slight chop, maybe two foot (60cm) waves.<\/p>\n

\"FPB-64-1-Performance-100\"<\/p>\n

The photo above is from the engine instrument panel. Deere tells us the fuel data is computed not measured. They think it is accurate as it is a function of what the fuel injection computer is mapped to perform. We will eventually compare this data with day tank levels over long passages to quantify the accuracy.<\/p>\n

The Maretron system has not yet had the data averaging set so the numbers are running up and down and it is hard to log the exact average reading.<\/p>\n

We are treating this as an indicator. The real data will come from long passages and measuring day tank consumption.<\/p>\n

With the above caveats, here is what this is telling us right now:<\/p>\n