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On Wed, 07 Nov 2007 01:50:41 GMT, Jere Lull wrote:
We've found that even with the fresh water closed off, we have about 5 minutes' run-time at cruise power (about 2200 rpm) before the high-temp alarm sounds -- quite a bit further than 200 meters. We used that reserve once about a decade ago, so I know it exists. I am not sure I would rely on the light to protect the engine. I know that it is supposed to... What do you mean by fresh water. My [22 ft sterndrive] is cooled by glycol and has a heat exchanger. If I am floating in salt water, there is no fresh water involved anywhere. I have heard the heat exchanger/glycol arrangement refered to as fresh water cooling. There is seldom [never?] a shutoff in the coolant lines, although there is generally a seacock in the raw water line. When was the last time you saw a shutoff in a car cooling system? One thing is certain, unless the pump is managing to circulate coolant through the engine, it won't last anything like five minutes. The difference between driving with a broken fan belt, and driving with no coolant. That will warp the head[s] almost immediately. You got away with it once, so appearantly the light gives sufficient warning. I like a gauge. That shows up a problem sooner than a light. My car has both gauge and light for the oil pressure. Casady |
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