Thread: more bad news
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Jeff Zimmerman
 
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Default more bad news

I posted earlier about the motor in my boat being full of water.
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Well, my friend and I just pulled our 1970 slickcraft out of storage
(my uncle's driveway). We had the old boat cover on it, and a tarp
over that we didnt have the original bows, so we mad some by ripping
down a 2x4. Needless to say, these didnt last the winter, and a bunch
of water was pooled up on the tarp, and resting on the engine cover.

We get it back to his garage and open the motor cover, and it was
covered with water, every little divit or vally on top of the motor
had water in it, and it get's better. We try to turn it over, we get
about a 1/4 revolution using the starter, and it doesnt move. We put a
breaker bar on the crank and try to turn it by hand, it wont budge. So
we figure the cylinders are rusted alittle. so we pull the spark
plugs, every cylinder was full of water with alittle oil mixed in.
(one cylinder had more oil than water in it. we then drain the "oil",
which turned out to be about 7 quarts of water and 3 quarts of oil.

We figure the water came in through the carb. (the stud that holds the
flame arrestor on is alittle too high, so the previous owner just
drilled a hole in the cover.)

There's a few things i dont really understand:

1. How did all 8 cylinders get water in them?, did it just leak past
the valves?

2. How did the water get into the oil pan? We're thinking maybe a
freeze plug in the bottom of the intake manifold, which would open a
hole to the lifter valley. We've had some varying temperatures,
(enough to melt the snow and then cold enough to refreeze it)

We just redid the headgaskets last summer because we had a few cracks
in the water jacket in the lifter valley. So we are hoping it's just a
couple of freeze plugs, but I'm expecting the worst.
We're going to do a compression test on all the cylnders to see if
there's anything unusual there. Are there any other tests we can do to
determine how much damage there is without tearing it apart?


Any insight on this would be greatly appreciated. Oh BTW the motor is
a Chevy 307.

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My friend and I finally got around to doing a compression test.
The results:
1 120
2 120
3 10
4 95
5 90
6 60
7 85
8 90

We definitly know there is a problem with cylinder 3.
we are thinking it's a cracked piston. we are thinking about either
repairing it or getting a new motor. (either way, it's gotta come
out).

for the new motor, we were thinking about getting a 350 out of a van
or something. would there be a problem with doing this?

would there be a problem with the water cooled exhaust. (engine
sucking water in because the valve timing is wrong). a new or marine
cam would fix this problem, but we dont want to fork over a ton of
money for it.


Any suggestions would be greatly appreaciated.