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Presuming you do not have the remote resevoir the only way for drive lube to
get into the boat is through the seal where the drive shaft enters the upper unit. I would concentrate on figuring out how you're getting water into the unit first. It should not be getting into the unit from the upper drive shaft seal. That part is inside the bellows and if there was a water leak you would be getting a lot of water in your boat. The seals are designed to deal with a slight pressure but not a lot. The additional water could be forcing the lube out. Or the loss of lube could be encouraging the water to come in. The upper and lower units both have seals on the shafts going in and out. On the lower this includes the shift shaft. They share the lube through a hole in the cases with a o-ring on it where they bolt together, not through the shafts. A shop would probably replace all the seals on the upper and lower. It takes a number of specialized tools and you also should check the gear setup and play when you put it back together. Closest auto thing that comes to mind is installing a set of rear differential gears, the mesh is adjustable. You could check around, some dealers would probably give you a break if you bring the lower and upper units in alone. And replace the water pump yourself when they're done. That would knock and hour or two off the labor and keep them from having to jocky the boat around. You'll want to get a service manual as the procedures for doing anything to the drive are specific and not always obvious when you're just unbolting things. I suspect from your post that you've not ever taken the drive off, how it works will be a lot more obvious when you've done that once. "D.B." wrote in message ... I have a 1989 Stingray with a 3.0 liter Mercruiser engine with an Alpha one outdrive. I have been getting about a half a cup of water in the foot after about every 4 hours of operation. I have been changing the foot oil after every use (4hours) so as to keep things from going poop until I could put it in the shop. I recently changed from the expensive Mercruiser outdrive lube (quicksilver) to a cheaper 80W90 gear oil (seeing as I was changing it after every 4 hours of operation). I have been noticing what I thought was gear oil in the bilge, but was not sure until I changed lubes. Now I am positive that I have gear oil from the foot in the bilge. My question(s) are these.... would it be that the upper water seals in the outdrive are causing the water to get into the foot and the oil to leak into the bilge? Question number two....I am a decent mechanic.....without having specialized tools, is it practical for me to replace the seals myself (I did rebuild a Porsche motor several years ago....to give you a benchmark of my mechanical capabilities) Any help would be appreciated. Dave |
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