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First, see if the volumetric output .... (the water coming out at the
exhaust hole at the back of the boat) is within 'spec'. That will be found in your owners maintenance manual; and, will be something like: 3 gallons per minute at 2500 rpm. You measure it with a bucket and a stopwatch. If the that flow is not correct, then look for a restriction in the system such as broken impeller vane lodged in the rubber hoses, large rust 'flake' breaking loose inside the exhaust manifold (common occurance), etc. etc. Old cast iron exhaust manifolds have the 'habit' of breaking off huge 'slabs' of rusted cast iron inside the manifold passages that will restrict the water flow. If the volumetric flow rate is within or near spec. then Marsolve or Rydlyme will work wonders in descaling the exchanger and the engine internals. Use it on both cooling circuits: the raw water side and the fresh water side. Check for a flow restriction with a bucket and a stop watch FIRST. ;-) In article , Rick & Linda Bernard wrote: Anyone tried it? I have a question in on their web site but they don't seem to want to answer it. Let me poise the question to the group - I have a 50 hp fresh water cooled diesel that is beginning to run hot. The engine temp seems to be creeping up to 200 F at cruising speed with salt water temps in the 60's. Used to run at 180-185 with water temps of 80+. Water flow out the back seems less then expected and has been going down over the years even with a new raw water impeller-pump. Without pulling the heat exchanger, exhaust elbow, and hydro lift out can Marsolve clean up the system? Marsolve is $20 a gallon and I am willing to pay vs having to pull the heat exchanger and elbow. (need to pull the heat exchanger to get enough room to get the elbow. In fact I might need to pull the exhaust manifold) |
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Engine overheat-yanmar 2qm15 | Cruising |