Marty, I am always curious. When the temp readings were taken, what type of water pick-up were you using?
If it was the pick-up in the rudder blade, which side of the rudder was the pick-up hole on?
Charles
Charles:
Water pickup was in the rudder and was on the inside.
You are moving toward a conclusion that I thought might be valid, that there was a little bit less water than optimum to keep temps steady. There was some elevation of temps as the run progressed.
Marty, I have several different thoughts to the changing temps as the run progresses.
The first is I am an old carburetor man, motorcycles, real outboards, racing Go Karts, automotive engines, racing/ daily transportation and about everything else that has a carb on it. ALL of the carbs with a float and float chamber are sensitive to fuel levels, sensitive to as little as .010 of an inch for consistent performance.
On our fuel systems, the fuel tanks themselves act as the fuel float chambers in relation to the fuel level differences between the carb spray bar and the fuel level in the tanks. This level difference as the fuel burns in our boats are measured in INCHES. Even taking into consideration that we are using pipe pressure there is still a leaning out effect on the engine as the fuel level drops in the fuel tanks. Leaner mixture, higher EGT. Whew.......get to the second one later.
Charles