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JohnH wrote:
If you read the initial 'bad day on the bay' post, you are aware that I had a problem last Friday. Inspected the boat on Monday. Found the cause of the smoke to be the overheating of the insulation on the wiring harness which was laying on the exhaust elbow. (Probably done by the manufacturer.) Also, the lack of water going through the starboard exhaust caused the rubber section of exhaust pipe just below the elbow to melt out, The smoke was due to all the melting rubber. I removed both sets of risers and manifolds and the other damaged parts on the starboard side of the engine (5.7L Mercruiser). The wiring harness was repairable. The riser didn't have an obvious plug. When the manifold was removed from the starboard side, I noticed a discoloration in the exhaust port of the third cylinder from the front. By discoloration, I mean a reddish (rusty) color. I didn't feel it, at the time, but today the mechanic at the marina said it was wet when he looked at it a day later. The mechanic didn't do anything further than look at it and feel the wetness with his finger. I also, today, felt the same port on the manifold, and it was also wet. The mechanic wants to run a compression check on Monday. Now I'm concerned that what I thought was a plugged up riser may be something much more serious. Questions: What could cause a wet exhaust port on one cylinder? I asked &; The cyl head casting is not too thick around the exhaust ports, so in salt water, raw cooled, cast iron, etc etc. The "problem" with raw water cooling is you can't let the salt water get too hot or the salt drops out, around the exhaust port is where the most heat is. If there is a problem with that cylinder, how could it have prevented water from going through the riser? Probably shouldn't of itself but; is there is salt buildup inside the head generally? that would. Don't assume this particular leak was the only cause of the overheat. If I try to pour water through water channels in the riser, and it either comes out or doesn't, can that diagnose a plugged riser? I guess it can indicate a flow path, but it's less than pin holes that develop near the hot spots which allow salt buildup inside & rusting. The real fear is that the weeping very tiny "just looks a bit moist" leaks will eventually allow water back into a cyl between uses, then an hydraulic lock on start attempt is the risk. The engine didn't sound like it was missing. On Monday we'll start it and see what comes out of that exhaust port. (Without manifolds and risers, that should be a disquieting experience!) You can have a bad leak in the exhaust port &/or manifold & still run OK. The exhaust pressure/flow keeps any water going in the right direction. Starting it will not help much, nor a compression test, you need to make sure the exhaust port (downstream of the exhaust valve) is not leaking & a run or compression test won't help with that. Thanks for any help. Smart assed comments about my lack of V8 expertise will also be accepted. I know it is scary bananas but if you take the head or (s) off & take them to a machine shop, they will bolt them to a flat block of steel & then pressure test the head itself (apparently it doesn't cost much), this will find any leaks, into the combustion chamber or out of the coolant side. The advice is that chev heads would be so cheap there, just get another set ex a wrecking yard from a car (run on antifreeze & rust inhib coolant= good) have the valves serviced, if required & you'll be out sooner & cheaper. Harry couldn't lend you the union fund's boat any more than he has ever owned any boat, he's just a socialist liar:-) (I had to say that for form:-) Good luck with it John. K John H On the 'Poco Loco' out of Deale, MD, on the beautiful Chesapeake Bay! |
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