My buddy's '78 33 is raw water cooled as yours is and he has a hot water system. It doesn't get as hot as fast as one with an exchanger, but works pretty well.. I may be around his boat tomorrow so I will take a couple of shots to show the hook-up. Looks like two pipe plugs were pulled and hose barbs attached .. hoses hooked to the tank and there it is.. The other question .. yes you can install a fresh water cooling system for the engine but it will be pretty expensive .. there are kits available with most of the parts in a bundle .. Someone on this site may have a link..
If you get raw salt water hot enough to provide decent domestic hot water heat, you will have trouble with deposits in your engine cooling passages. For this reason, a higher temperature thermostat isn't available for my RW cooled Yanmar. You need a FW cooled engine for engine heated water to be practical.But maybe there is a change in thermostats involved. Because most who have tried it find that it takes way too long to just get luke warm water.
I notice you found the on demand propane thread from last year. I recommend you read through the entire thing. It has opinions from every which way AND loose, but I think you get a good overall idea of the issues. I think the "approved" list is a decent guide, but there is probably no one here who has only approved items on their boat. The key, in my opinion, is to do it smart with plenty of backups. If the Excel on demand is installed correctly with propane and CO detectors, AND used smartly it should be fine.I have a 1982 Hunter 33 that is raw water cooled and doesn't have a heat exchanger. can one be added to give me hot water on the hook?
We don't know the engine model of the original poster. But if its the QM series, I've discovered that its not possible to change thermostats from the 140F raw water cooled version to a ~170F type. This is because Yanmar's 140F thermostat model is a different size/shape than the higher temp version. For the original raw water designed engines, the thermostat housing molded into the exhaust manifold will only accept the 140F size. This makes a lot of sense to prevent people from unwittingly upping to 170F with salt water coursing through the engine. As Roger Long commented, the internal cooling passages will plug up with deposited salts and minerals. I've read that its almost impossible to later clear these out.But maybe there is a change in thermostats involved. Because most who have tried it find that it takes way too long to just get luke warm water.
I've recommended to the QM owner who is going to buy my hot water tank that he simply reroute the RW flow directly to the elbow an cap the head exchanger connections. A pinhole or crack developing in the heat exchanger when the engine was off could let the FW pressure fill up the muffler and then back up into the engine waterlocking it. The next start attempt would them be exciting and perhaps damaging.if its the QM series, I've discovered that its not possible to change thermostats
Is there a concern that the salty raw water would cause corrosion in the water heater and ruin it after a few seasons? Ed HI think Claude's friend simply plumbed his raw water-cooled engine through a hot water tank.