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I'm hoping I found and fixed the problem, thanks to Bob Dimond's
advice...the lift motor was a little loose in it's attachement to the bearing housing, so I simply tightened it. I'm hoping that there was just enough play before I tightened that the motor was not always making the worm screw turn as it should. Bob In article . com, Mark Brotcke wrote: :I had a Volvo 275 outdrive For 5 years. There are not Hydraulics. It is a :Electric lift. When mine would not lift I had to remove engine cover and :bang on the electric motor (should be located in back right top side of :engine) the price of a new or rebuilt motor was to high so I lived the :inconvencae of my outdrive not raising now and then! : : :"Bob D." wrote in message ... : Bob, : : First I need to qualify my remarks: : : Since getting information on Volvos is about as easy as teaching a dog to : do your taxes, so I can not say with 100% certainty I am correct. : : I do believe my 275 outdrive does not use any hydraulics. I think the 275 : uses a an electric motor directly to turn a gear which raises and lowers : the outdrive. The 270 may use the same type of system. : : In any case, I was having the exact same problem as you on my boat. I : could not raise the outdrive, but heard the trim motor whirling away. The : problem turned out to be the trim motor was loose at the transom plate. : The motor is held in to mesh with a gear by two screws. After I detected : the problem I tightened the screws up and the problem subsided. It was : impossible getting a screwdriver in to torque the screws down so they : would loosen every so often. Finally I put a little RTV on the threads : and the problem has not reared it's uglg head since. : : Send me an email to let me know if this works for you! : : Bob Dimond : : : |
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