Normally I operate my 22 cruiser at sea level (Chesapeake Bay). It has an 08 BF90D engine with about 200 hours on it. Last time I used the boat (about two weeks ago) everything worked fine. With the prop that is on it the normal WOT rpm is 5600.
This week I took the boat to a lake that has an elevation of about 1000' MSL. I found that the engine would not run above ~3400 rpm (about 12 mph). Below that speed it works fine. I cruised for a number of hours at 2000 rpm (~7 mph).
If I try to go faster the boat accelerates normally until about 12 mph, and then won't go any faster. The engine rpm peaks at ~3400 and then will fall off a bit if I keep advancing the throttle. When the engine is in neutral it will go above 3400 rpm with out any problem.
My question is am I experiencing difficulty because of the altitude or do I have an engine problem? I have not tried running the engine at the normal altitude yet.
If this is an altitude issue I would not have expected 1000 ft. to make such a big difference in the engine performance. I know that people who go to Lake Powell have to adjust their prop pitch to compensate for the altitude, but that is 4000' plus higher temps.
If this is an elevation issue, is there a way to predict/calculate the proper prop pitch in advance (i.e. pitch change/1000 ft)?
This week I took the boat to a lake that has an elevation of about 1000' MSL. I found that the engine would not run above ~3400 rpm (about 12 mph). Below that speed it works fine. I cruised for a number of hours at 2000 rpm (~7 mph).
If I try to go faster the boat accelerates normally until about 12 mph, and then won't go any faster. The engine rpm peaks at ~3400 and then will fall off a bit if I keep advancing the throttle. When the engine is in neutral it will go above 3400 rpm with out any problem.
My question is am I experiencing difficulty because of the altitude or do I have an engine problem? I have not tried running the engine at the normal altitude yet.
If this is an altitude issue I would not have expected 1000 ft. to make such a big difference in the engine performance. I know that people who go to Lake Powell have to adjust their prop pitch to compensate for the altitude, but that is 4000' plus higher temps.
If this is an elevation issue, is there a way to predict/calculate the proper prop pitch in advance (i.e. pitch change/1000 ft)?