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On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 20:31:14 +0000, Wayne. wrote:
On Wed, 14 Jan 2004 23:52:30 GMT, "jim" wrote: hey guys, looking for some guidance on salt water since i boat on the Ohio river. I am looking a purchasing a formula that is in Florida that is a 99 with 502 motors. Two years rack stored, two and half years in the water with bottom paint, bottom paint put on last year. Outdrives replaced in december. Motors have 700 hours with 160 psi compression, but what I am worried about is the salt water going through the engine. How bad is this? ================================================== It's bad. If the engines are salt water cooled, they are getting near the end of their useful life, particularly on a boat which has been pushed hard. If freshwater cooled with heat exchangers, then you need to worry about the exhaust manifolds, risers and oil coolers, all of which are about due for replacement. In either case, those engines with 700 hours on them are no bargain at any price. I think our salt water must be different from yours. Although Far Cove is fresh-water cooled, the heat exchanger, riser, etc. has been exposed to salt water for 20 years (3000hrs or so) and are still good. If 700 hrs is "real" (ie the hourmeter has not been disconnected, etc) I'd say the engines still have lots of life left. Hell, sweat is salt water. If it was THAT damaging, everything we touched would be corroded and falling apart. ALL outboards are "raw-water cooled" and ones that are in the water 24/7/364 are usually not flushed after every use. Yet, they seem to last for more than 5 years... Lloyd Sumpter "Far Cove" Catalina 36 |
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