@JohnShannon Correct. However, if you have kept up with the rest of this thread and can reasonalby determine that you have a properly sized engine with the proper reduction gear, a properly sized prop and a clean hull an prop. The Propellor Power Curves for your particular engine gives a "reasonable" approximation of load on the diesel. If your prop is fouled or fallen off, of course, your approximation falls apart. That is the purpose of this thread.
Very few of us will go to the trouble of installing the instrumentation to determine true load but knowing a good approximation is good enough. For instance, I learned that for a Yanmar 4JH2E you have to get way up in RPM on the Propeller Power Curve (much higher than I imagined) to get to =>60% power, which many believe (not all though) is better for diesels that don't like to be lightly loaded. For example, at my previous normal cruising RPM of 2750 (75% max RPM) I previously assumed I was at about 75% load. As it turns out, the load is more like 45% @2750 RPM. My fuel burn should be about 1.25 gal/hr (which is the case from experience). If I desired to cruise at 60% load, I'd have to up it to almost 3100 RPM which would then increase my cruise fuel burn to 1.7 gal/hr. Probably not enough bang for the $$. I won't get enough of a speed increase in doing this so I"ll probably stay at about 2750 RPM for the most part. Will that change how I cruise. Maybe, maybe not, but I will continue to be diligent to run at near max RPM for a few minutes every day when I am cruising.
In the next few days I intend to go out and do rigorous RPM vs Speed runs and see what the differences are and from that can not only tell the best cruise RPM, but can determine best RPM for range when that is a trade off that I might need to make in the future.
That is the purpose of this thread. I learned a lot. Maybe you did, maybe you didn't but I think others may have.
