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I'm overjoyed I coaxed you into a proper reply to Bart's Question Jeff! ;-P
Seriously... each step you illustrated was correct... and I don't have a gauge so I have to assume a warning buzzer. I've had a few clogged intakes in time and a couple of bad impellers.... I concur with your assessment of Yanmar Pumps! CM "Jeff Morris" wrote in message ... | The coolant flow can be checked by inspection almost immediately, though a | partial clog can look OK and still send it into Overheat. Certainly I'd look | there first if there was any significant change. | | However, if the gauge is moving quickly, like up and down in a matter of | seconds, it can't be a real temperature issue, because the coolant can't change | temperature that quickly. I've never had a temp sensor do that, but I've seen | it from a faulty oil pressure sensor, and I've seen it from a dangling wire. | | When my heat exchanger was partially clogged the engine was more sensitive the | overheating problems. I could tell within a few seconds if my wife turned on | the microwave because the temp would start to creep up. Now the temp is a bit | more stable, but I can't run the engine up to 3000 rpm if the alternator is | fully loaded. | | BTW, last week I did have an overheat situation: within a minute after dropping | the mooring at Kittery, I noticed the starboard engine temp going up. It put it | into neutral and asked my wife to check the water flow - there was none. We | killed the engine and went back to the mooring (its sometimes nice to have two | engines!). First I pulled the intake of the pump - full flow meaning no intake | clog. Then I pulled the output hose off and asked my wife to "start" with the | kill switch pulled - no flow. At that point I just pulled off the water pump, | removed the cover (damn Yanmar mounted the pump on the GM's so that the cover | can't be reached without pulling the pump!). The impellor looked OK, but my | wife asked how it worked so I spun the pulley to show her but the impeller | didn't spin! I seems the impellor was spinning free on its hub. A spare was | put in and we were underway again with a total delay of about 45 minutes. | | | | | "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message | ... | Good Grief Jeff...... if you have a coolant problem you'd check the belts??? | Wouldn't you tend to believe the sensor and simply verify the coolant flow | prior to questioning your instruments? | | CM | | "Jeff Morris" wrote in message | ... | | Oh! The ENGINE temperature! | | | | Even if there is a cooling problem, the engine provides a significant | buffer, so | | if the fluctuation is fast, as in you actually see the needle move, its | probably | | a loose connection on the sensor, or some other such fault. | | | | If its a small engine with a large alternator it could be a slipping belt. | I've | | never seen a case where the coolant flow went up and down repeatedly but I | | suppose it could happen. Can a thermostat fail in this mode? | | | | |
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