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Question about milky oil
A good question about ramped stupidity..
I have an 87 omc cobra stern drive. The engine has not run for 5 years (until now). I basically replaced everything mounted on the outside of the engine and got it running (well in fact). I ran it for a half hour while checking the oil periodically. The oil on the dipstick was nice and clean. After a while I looked into the valve cover and noticed the oil coming off the rockers was milky (dipstick was clean and tan in color.?.). After realizing that the dipstick does not actually go into the oil pan but into a tube connected to the bottom of the pan, I shut down the engine and immediately changed the oil. The oil was milky (like tea with a little cream in it) but no free pooling water or foam and it did not smell in any way (aside from the normal smell of oil). After changing the oil, I restarted the engine and it still ran well with no unusual noises. Ran if for an hour at different rpms, while periodically checking the oil (blowing air into dipstick tube to make sure I am really seeing what the oil looks like) and it was still clean. No water has shown up again. The trip is that the boat has not actually been in the water for those 5 years.but on the trailer.so I guess it was condensate (was in Florida). The engine fires right up, idles nicely, no smoke what so ever, runs at the proper temp and produces 50psi oil pressure at 1,000 rpms on 10w30. I do plan to change the oil after 10 hrs of operation and then back to the normal once a season. Anyway, the question- what should I look out for if there were any potential problems starting and any suggestions to reduce the chance of future problems. I have no reason to believe there will be future problems but I was a little (a lot) panicked when I saw the milky oil.but since the boat was not in the water, the water in the oil could not have been salt water. So at least that is a positive. Thanks for the help, mark |
"Red Cloud®" wrote in message ... The question would be, what possible damage to the internals may have happend due to the presence of that moisture for 5 years. Salt or not, it may be of no concern at all. The only real way to go further would be a tear down. I would suggest that you just run the engine normally and keep an eye on it. If you hear a loud squealing noise, you have rust problems. rusty redcloud I had considered that but the oil that came out had no dark tint so I had supposed that if it had rusted anything the oil would have had a red tint. I was more concerned of corroding the bearings then rusting something but you are right. thanks for the response. mark |
10-30 is a bit thin for a marine engine. Mercury oil is 25w40. If you have
some space at your watering hole I would back the boat into the water and run it in gear for about 30 minutes to load the engine and then drain the oil and check it. "r_d" wrote in message roups.com... A good question about ramped stupidity.. I have an 87 omc cobra stern drive. The engine has not run for 5 years (until now). I basically replaced everything mounted on the outside of the engine and got it running (well in fact). I ran it for a half hour while checking the oil periodically. The oil on the dipstick was nice and clean. After a while I looked into the valve cover and noticed the oil coming off the rockers was milky (dipstick was clean and tan in color.?.). After realizing that the dipstick does not actually go into the oil pan but into a tube connected to the bottom of the pan, I shut down the engine and immediately changed the oil. The oil was milky (like tea with a little cream in it) but no free pooling water or foam and it did not smell in any way (aside from the normal smell of oil). After changing the oil, I restarted the engine and it still ran well with no unusual noises. Ran if for an hour at different rpms, while periodically checking the oil (blowing air into dipstick tube to make sure I am really seeing what the oil looks like) and it was still clean. No water has shown up again. The trip is that the boat has not actually been in the water for those 5 years.but on the trailer.so I guess it was condensate (was in Florida). The engine fires right up, idles nicely, no smoke what so ever, runs at the proper temp and produces 50psi oil pressure at 1,000 rpms on 10w30. I do plan to change the oil after 10 hrs of operation and then back to the normal once a season. Anyway, the question- what should I look out for if there were any potential problems starting and any suggestions to reduce the chance of future problems. I have no reason to believe there will be future problems but I was a little (a lot) panicked when I saw the milky oil.but since the boat was not in the water, the water in the oil could not have been salt water. So at least that is a positive. Thanks for the help, mark |
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