Cruisers Forum
 

Go Back   Cruisers & Sailing Forums > Scuttlebutt > Our Community
Cruiser Wiki Click Here to Login
Register Vendors FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Log in

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Rate Thread Display Modes
Old 17-09-2019, 12:27   #1
Registered User

Join Date: Jun 2019
Location: Leigh NZ
Boat: Oyster 56
Posts: 86
Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

In the purchase process of a yacht with a 2009 VW marine 5cyl 150hp engine. Less than 2000hours. It’s a much more modern engine than I’m familiar with. Interested in people’s experience with these. Reliability, part availability, economy, what to check for, what tests to do/have done as part of mechanical survey, what kind of code reader is required.
PhilC is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 18-09-2019, 00:56   #2
Registered User

Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Australia
Boat: Island Packet 40
Posts: 6,460
Images: 7
Re: Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

Big question is whether it is common rail fuel system or not.
RaymondR is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14-10-2019, 22:08   #3
Registered User

Join Date: Jun 2019
Location: Leigh NZ
Boat: Oyster 56
Posts: 86
Re: Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

Yes, It's a common rail fuel injection system.
PhilC is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 14-10-2019, 23:14   #4
Registered User
 
Zanshin's Avatar

Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Caribbean
Boat: Jeanneau 57
Posts: 2,284
Images: 2
Re: Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

I have a TDI-150 VW/Mercruiser marine engine aboard. It has run well apart from my recent problems with bad fuel (lots of water in the fuel when I started it). I had a lot of issues that were solved, but my big problem with the engine is the lack of support and lack of knowledge. While Mercury is a big company, very few of their hundreds of service points have any expertise at all with the engine and even fewer will actually work on the engine.

The engine is a common diesel in Europe (Jetta, Passat, etc.) while the 5-Cylinder TDI was never put into cars in the USA. There are lots of manuals and lots of expertise in the car world. I ended up using a VW car shop in Newport, RI this year since the only Mercruiser service point who would work on the engine wouldn't make house calls and their marina's depth was too shallow for me to be towed in.

The parts situation is absolutely ludicrous. I needed a new fuel injection pump, and the official source was $5700 and several weeks wait; since the pump is 100% identical to the car pump I opted to go for a $400 replacement from VW. Likewise the little electric fuel pump that costs $70 in stores was being sold for $570 (same part number, except it is hidden by white paint on the marine engine).

What is good is that the engine uses a Bosch ECU with only slightly modified EEPROM code. So for the price of a cheap CAN-BUS cable and some free software you can examine all the data from the engine - something that can't be done on most other diesels. I used Ross-Tech software and the engine code for the VW Marine engines is on their list of supported engines.

All in all the engine is rock-solid but keep in mind that car mechanics and car supply stores are going to be much better in terms of knowledge, availability and price than Mercruiser.
__________________
Zanshin sailing
Zanshin is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-10-2019, 00:31   #5
Registered User

Join Date: Jun 2019
Location: Leigh NZ
Boat: Oyster 56
Posts: 86
Re: Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

Thank you. Very useful information. Did water get past the filters to the pump? Wondering if I need to add in another racor and perhaps a fuel scrubbing facility if engine going to be more sensitive than old school diesels? I am certainly impressed by the low vibration and noise levels of the installation in the oyster
PhilC is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 15-10-2019, 10:09   #6
Registered User
 
Zanshin's Avatar

Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Caribbean
Boat: Jeanneau 57
Posts: 2,284
Images: 2
Re: Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

I have a dual racor filter which works really well - but in this case it had no chance since there was more water than fuel and it made it into the fuel lines. That is what killed the expensive high-pressure fuel pump. The real issue was that I had some inexperienced (but very, very pricey) technicians in the BVI look at the engine and try to get it running and they neglected to put a small but vital spring back into the engine. That little error cost me a month of work and mooring fees in Newport, RI (the boat was shipped from the Caribbean to the USA so that I could get the work done on it) while I searched in vain for boat technicians to help me.

Basically the cause of the problem was clear and not the fault of the engine, and when ingesting that amount of water the fuel pump is going to suffer. My issue is with Mercruiser's outrageous prices for commodity items and their lack of support for the TDI engines. I can understand that shops have to invest a lot of money on getting their technicians "certified" for a given type of engine and that the Turbo-Diesels are not common so all of the service stations have concentrated their expertise in more profitable areas. But to find not a single marine shop willing to do this work in the whole of RI (one of the bigger yachting centres in the USA) was a grave disappointment and I gave up early on using Mercury support - they kept on telling me to use their webpages to locate service stations despite me telling them that (a) a number of them hadn't support Mercury in years and (b) none of them supported my engine.
__________________
Zanshin sailing
Zanshin is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 23-05-2022, 06:10   #7
Registered User

Join Date: May 2022
Posts: 2
Re: Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

Your engine being a Marine and I guess being used in your boat? :-)
Do you by any chance have succesfully managed to integrate in NMEA2000, or SignalK?
TBinder is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 23-05-2022, 06:14   #8
Registered User

Join Date: May 2022
Posts: 2
Re: Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

I have 2x Volswagen Marine 265-6 TDI, from 2009 and only 500 hours on them.
They run very smoth and I would like to have the data from diagnose plug integrated into my NMEA2000 network. Have a setup og running SignalK server and would be nice to pull the engine data directly instead of mounting analogue signal senders.
I know that I simply could connect the engine with ex. Actisence EMU-1 as analogue to NMEA2K gateway, but my engines are quite new year model 2009 and given it has ODB2 I feel it must be possible somehow.
TBinder is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 23-05-2022, 06:36   #9
Registered User
 
Zanshin's Avatar

Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Caribbean
Boat: Jeanneau 57
Posts: 2,284
Images: 2
Re: Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

I haven't tried to integrate the signals into NMEA2000, but it is possible to read the signal coming from the VW ECU into a PC, which can then translate those signals to the appropriate PGN ones for NMEA2000 and rebroadcast them. The timing is probably slow enough to be able to program something like an Arduino to do the translation. Libraries exist for both ODBII and NMEA2000. The hardware interface is simple, but the software would require a bit more work, depending upon which data is to be sent to the NMEA system.
__________________
Zanshin sailing
Zanshin is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 23-05-2022, 07:24   #10
Senior Cruiser
 
GordMay's Avatar

Cruisers Forum Supporter

Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Thunder Bay, Ontario - 48-29N x 89-20W
Boat: (Cruiser Living On Dirt)
Posts: 49,448
Images: 241
Re: Volkswagen 5cyl marine diesel

Greetings and welcome aboard the CF, TBinder.
__________________
Gord May
"If you didn't have the time or money to do it right in the first place, when will you get the time/$ to fix it?"



GordMay is online now   Reply With Quote
Reply

Tags
diesel, marine


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
TD Power Marine, Chinese Marine Diesel Engine pagu Engines and Propulsion Systems 100 15-01-2024 03:17
pathfinder volkswagen candideyy Monohull Sailboats 7 25-11-2020 09:56
Gas Station Diesel vs Marine Diesel Rocketman Engines and Propulsion Systems 75 08-05-2016 19:31
Marine diesel vs highway diesel Mike Sibley Engines and Propulsion Systems 46 01-01-2013 11:44
diesel is diesel? Jack Long Engines and Propulsion Systems 12 03-09-2008 16:53

Advertise Here


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 10:28.


Google+
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Social Knowledge Networks
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.

ShowCase vBulletin Plugins by Drive Thru Online, Inc.