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#1
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Those of you in the frozen wastes will know about this but it never
occurred to me because it rarely has gotten cold enough here. When I get home, I run fresh water through my 90 hp Yamaha outboard. Does sufficient water stay in the cooling passages to freeze and cause trouble? |
#2
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On Nov 25, 9:07*am, Frogwatch wrote:
Those of you in the frozen wastes will know about this but it never occurred to me because it rarely has gotten cold enough here. When I get home, I run fresh water through my 90 hp Yamaha outboard. Does sufficient water stay in the cooling passages to freeze and cause trouble? No, they pretty much drain themselves, however, you do need to verify there is no water in the lower unit. Terry |
#3
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Frogwatch wrote:
Those of you in the frozen wastes will know about this but it never occurred to me because it rarely has gotten cold enough here. When I get home, I run fresh water through my 90 hp Yamaha outboard. Does sufficient water stay in the cooling passages to freeze and cause trouble? Outboards will drain completely on their own so long as you don't tilt them up. |
#4
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On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 07:07:24 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote: Those of you in the frozen wastes will know about this but it never occurred to me because it rarely has gotten cold enough here. When I get home, I run fresh water through my 90 hp Yamaha outboard. Does sufficient water stay in the cooling passages to freeze and cause trouble? As long as you keep the engine tilted down so that all the water in the block and lower unit drain out, no. I have seen lower units busted up because they weren't drained properly though. It does happen in particular if you don't cover the exhaust port on the prop. |
#5
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Tom Francis - SWSports wrote:
On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 07:07:24 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: Those of you in the frozen wastes will know about this but it never occurred to me because it rarely has gotten cold enough here. When I get home, I run fresh water through my 90 hp Yamaha outboard. Does sufficient water stay in the cooling passages to freeze and cause trouble? As long as you keep the engine tilted down so that all the water in the block and lower unit drain out, no. I have seen lower units busted up because they weren't drained properly though. It does happen in particular if you don't cover the exhaust port on the prop. He He. |
#6
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On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 11:43:22 -0500, Jim wrote:
Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 07:07:24 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: Those of you in the frozen wastes will know about this but it never occurred to me because it rarely has gotten cold enough here. When I get home, I run fresh water through my 90 hp Yamaha outboard. Does sufficient water stay in the cooling passages to freeze and cause trouble? As long as you keep the engine tilted down so that all the water in the block and lower unit drain out, no. I have seen lower units busted up because they weren't drained properly though. It does happen in particular if you don't cover the exhaust port on the prop. He He. He he wasn't the reaction of the owner when he saw it after a few days of 20 degree temperatures. :) Brand new Optimax to boot. |
#7
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Tom Francis - SWSports wrote:
On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 11:43:22 -0500, Jim wrote: Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 07:07:24 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: Those of you in the frozen wastes will know about this but it never occurred to me because it rarely has gotten cold enough here. When I get home, I run fresh water through my 90 hp Yamaha outboard. Does sufficient water stay in the cooling passages to freeze and cause trouble? As long as you keep the engine tilted down so that all the water in the block and lower unit drain out, no. I have seen lower units busted up because they weren't drained properly though. It does happen in particular if you don't cover the exhaust port on the prop. He He. He he wasn't the reaction of the owner when he saw it after a few days of 20 degree temperatures. :) Brand new Optimax to boot. My guess is the engine was tilted up allowing the housing to fill with rain water. My guess is the boat was transported somewhere to be winterized and left tilted because it had to be transported again. Lower the outboard when you get to the winter resting spot. Rain isn't the only way the housing could fill with water. I think you know how, so there is no need to go into it. Also covering the prop hub reduces significantly, the possibility of trapped water evaporating. |
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