On Sat, 06 Oct 2007 20:35:42 -0700, Tim wrote:
On Oct 4, 10:22 am, Wayne.B wrote:
On Thu, 04 Oct 2007 08:17:57 -0400, HK wrote:
To me, the real downside of an I/O is the drive and the drive's big
rubber boot. The drive, because it adds complexity, and the boot
because, well, use your imagination.
We have a lot of I/Os in our area of SW Florida, including about 80%
of my neighbors. Interestingly enough you don't hear about many boot
problems although one neighbor did succeed in ripping the I/O clean
off the transom creating a boot failure of sorts. :-)
Cooling issues, manifolds and risers are near the top of the list
based on what I've observed.
I was going to say,t hat if I had an I/O on salt, I'd want an enclosed
cooling system, but still pull the boat after every use, and flush the
lower end with fresh water.
I googled marine cooling and this is one of my responses:
http://tinyurl.com/cqhmu
Some good info on cooling systems he
http://tinyurl.com/yozrfc
I wish I'd known about the fresh water systems when I bought the boat. I
don't know why they aren't the standard, although they may be the standard
now. I wonder how much more difficult changing the oil filter becomes with
all that extra piping and the exchanger mounted over the engine?