Well interesting! Direct injection, looking at the piston. I'd guess these are directly water cooled and hand start?
Presumably this engine was designed to run on canals, being a wet sumper - unless the sump was heavily baffled.
What RPM are we looking at?
Thanks for posting this - I love the old stuff, it reminds me of my classic dumper!
John
Trouble is, it SOUNDS like a classic dumper too! To be fair, there were a lot of clever ideas in it. Yes, direct injection, but electric start, albeit with a hand start backup. (And good luck with that on a cold morning)! However, because of the accessibility in a boat, the hand starter hand to be done from the front of the engine. It went on to the end of the cam shaft, but that didn't give enough of a step-up in speed, so the cam actually turns at 1/4 engine speed, rather than half, giving it a 4:1 step-up when hand cranking. This meant two inlet and two exhaust lobes on the cam, (180 degrees apart) even though it was a single cylinder.
Raw water cooled (which will be the death of all of them in the long run. I've already had to replace the head, because it rusted through between the water jacket and the inlet port). Designed for seagoing boats, it can run at a maximum heel angle of 25 degrees continuously. 528cc 7.5kW (10 horse) at 3000 RPM. Also, a brushless alternator in the flywheel (though these were only 20A and almost all f them packed up. I've put an external one on ours - you just can't get spares for them any more.