Click for Delta Click for Burger Click for YF Listing Service Click for JetForums Click for Northern Lights

DD 8V-92 DDEC III (760 HP) for long-range cruising

Discussion in 'General Yachting Discussion' started by Justin L, Nov 5, 2025 at 9:40 AM.

  1. Justin L

    Justin L New Member

    Joined:
    Apr 9, 2025
    Messages:
    3
    Location:
    Seattle
    Hi all,

    We’re seriously considering a yacht that checks nearly every box for us — layout, build quality, condition — but it’s powered by twin Detroit Diesel 8V-92TA DDEC III engines (760 HP, 1250 operating hours). Before we go further, I’d love to hear from anyone with direct experience running or maintaining these engines in a marine application.

    Our cruising plans are to run the boat from Alaska down to Mexico, spending long periods aboard and typically cruising slow and steady in the 8–10 knot range. We’re not in a hurry and value reliability and range over speed.

    Our only prior diesel experience was with Cummins QSBs (on our previous boat), so these older two-stroke Detroits are new territory for us. I’ve done a fair bit of reading and understand the basics — they’re not as fuel-efficient as modern 4-strokes, can be prone to wet-stacking if under-loaded, and need diligent maintenance. That said, we’re trying to figure out if these engines are a deal breaker or simply a quirk we can manage with proper care.

    A few specific questions for anyone familiar with this setup:
    • How do these engines behave when run at lower RPMs for extended periods (8–10 knots cruise)?
    • What kind of fuel burn and RPM have you seen in real-world cruising conditions?
    • Have you run them long distances at modest speeds — if so, how did they hold up?
    • Any common failure points or maintenance headaches specific to the DDEC III version (electronics, injectors, cooling systems, etc.)?
    • Are parts and support still reasonably available?
    • How concerned should we be about the DDEC electronics in terms of reliability and future serviceability?
    • If you were us — looking at a boat you otherwise love — would the 8V-92s stop you, or would you go ahead with eyes open and a good maintenance plan?
    We’re not opposed to a higher fuel burn if everything else about the boat works for us — we just want to go in with realistic expectations and understand any potential long-term limitations of these engines for slow-speed cruising.

    Any insights, stories, or hard data from owners or mechanics would be hugely appreciated.

    Thanks in advance for your time and experience — we’ve learned a lot from this forum and value the collective wisdom here.

    Justin
  2. Capt J

    Capt J Senior Member

    Joined:
    Jul 11, 2005
    Messages:
    14,738
    Location:
    Fort Lauderdale
    What style boat are they in? In all reality in most situations they're 2000-2500 hour engines between majors. Parts and so forth are available but might not be instantly available at a local dealer. You can run them slow but need to run them at cruise every 6 hours for about 30 minutes to clean them out. They're more efficient at and under 1000 rpms than modern 4 strokes by a good bit. I ran a 75' Hatteras motor yacht with 12v71TIs at 1000 rpms and we did 10 knots at 12 gph (both). I could live with the detroits but would much prefer 4 strokes from that era such as CAT 3406's.