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Default OIL IN THE WATER - mercruiser 6 cyliner 165 hp


"sonofadocker" wrote in message
oups.com...

Thanks for your reply. The boat was docked during the storm and the
stern was into the wind and waves. the water rose almost 4 feet at the
dock. my dock is at the dead end of a logoon.
i checked the boat many times to see that the pump was keeping up with
the rain water.
i did not think the water could be pushed up into the engine.



Unfortunately it can, particularly if there are heavy waves breaking against
the stern. There are exhaust "flappers" that act like check valves that are
supposed to prevent this from happening under normal conditions, but often
they are frozen open or simply rotted away. With 900 hours on the engine,
that is a distinct possibility.

The danger of trying to start the engine right now is that one or more of
the cylinders may have water in them.
Starting the engine could cause a hydrolocked condition, causing serious
engine damage. (water does not compress).

I think your engine is salvagable assuming no damage has been done other
than getting water in the oil.
I'll defer to the engine experts to give you the best advice as to how to
proceed from here.



if this is the case then some engine cranking with the plugs out and
another oil change might save the engine ?


Yes. And perhaps even another oil and filter change after that.



do you all think the motor is salvageable ???


Yes.
Sorry for your problems, but I think it can be fixed.

Eisboch


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Default OIL IN THE WATER - mercruiser 6 cyliner 165 hp


"Eisboch" wrote in message
...

"sonofadocker" wrote in message
oups.com...


I think your engine is salvagable assuming no damage has been done other
than getting water in the oil.
I'll defer to the engine experts to give you the best advice as to how to
proceed from here.


Well, you kinda already answered his question - crank for
a while with plugs out, change oil, get her fired up, and make
sure to get it up to tempreture (to cook out all the moisture),
and run it for some time. Not sure an immeadiate second
oil change is necessary, the heat should cook it all out. But
certainly can't hurt.


if this is the case then some engine cranking with the plugs out and
another oil change might save the engine ?


Yes. And perhaps even another oil and filter change after that.







do you all think the motor is salvageable ???


Yes.
Sorry for your problems, but I think it can be fixed.

Eisboch




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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
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Default OIL IN THE WATER - mercruiser 6 cyliner 165 hp

Good advice. Get it good and hot when you get it fired up. The heat
will evaporate the remaining water. Then check the oil again. If it
stays clear after that treatment then I would not worry about the
engine. You might want to check your exhaust flappers. If it's an
merc i/o they will be at the top of the pipe going down to the drive..

Mr Wizzard wrote:
"Eisboch" wrote in message
...

"sonofadocker" wrote in message
oups.com...


I think your engine is salvagable assuming no damage has been done other
than getting water in the oil.
I'll defer to the engine experts to give you the best advice as to how to
proceed from here.


Well, you kinda already answered his question - crank for
a while with plugs out, change oil, get her fired up, and make
sure to get it up to tempreture (to cook out all the moisture),
and run it for some time. Not sure an immeadiate second
oil change is necessary, the heat should cook it all out. But
certainly can't hurt.


if this is the case then some engine cranking with the plugs out and
another oil change might save the engine ?


Yes. And perhaps even another oil and filter change after that.







do you all think the motor is salvageable ???


Yes.
Sorry for your problems, but I think it can be fixed.

Eisboch



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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
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Default OIL IN THE WATER - mercruiser 6 cyliner 165 hp

THE BOAT CRANKED FINE WITH NO PLUGS. MOSTLY AIR/GAS CAME OUT.
I THINK THE MANIFOLD MIGHT STILL HAVE WATER IN IT ?
THE BOAT JUST DOESNT WANT TO START. IT IS ALMOST THERE. RUNS FOR A 15
SECONDS (POORLY) AND STOPS.
I WAS WONDERING IF WATER VAPOR IS STILL MIXING WITH THE FUEL ?

IS THERE A BOLT OR DRAIN I CAN NOT SEE ON THE MANIFOLD TO GET ANY WATER
OUT ?

RAINING AGAIN SO I WILL TRY AGAIN ON THURSDAY.

SONOFADOCKER


jamesgangnc wrote:
Good advice. Get it good and hot when you get it fired up. The heat
will evaporate the remaining water. Then check the oil again. If it
stays clear after that treatment then I would not worry about the
engine. You might want to check your exhaust flappers. If it's an
merc i/o they will be at the top of the pipe going down to the drive..

Mr Wizzard wrote:
"Eisboch" wrote in message
...

"sonofadocker" wrote in message
oups.com...


I think your engine is salvagable assuming no damage has been done other
than getting water in the oil.
I'll defer to the engine experts to give you the best advice as to how to
proceed from here.


Well, you kinda already answered his question - crank for
a while with plugs out, change oil, get her fired up, and make
sure to get it up to tempreture (to cook out all the moisture),
and run it for some time. Not sure an immeadiate second
oil change is necessary, the heat should cook it all out. But
certainly can't hurt.


if this is the case then some engine cranking with the plugs out and
another oil change might save the engine ?

Yes. And perhaps even another oil and filter change after that.







do you all think the motor is salvageable ???


Yes.
Sorry for your problems, but I think it can be fixed.

Eisboch



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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 389
Default OIL IN THE WATER - mercruiser 6 cyliner 165 hp

A small amount of water going through with the combustion mixture
shouldn't make it run poorly. In fact there have been various water
injection mechanisms in the past that deliberately inject a small
amount of water.

If it is running bad at this point I'd be more inclined to suspect wet
ignition issues. With all the rain everything is probably wet. Make
sure the inside of the distributor is dry and spray the wires down with
a little wd40. The other possibility is that you have gotten a lot of
water in your fuel tank as well. If you have a water separator dump it
and see how much water is in it.

sonofadocker wrote:
THE BOAT CRANKED FINE WITH NO PLUGS. MOSTLY AIR/GAS CAME OUT.
I THINK THE MANIFOLD MIGHT STILL HAVE WATER IN IT ?
THE BOAT JUST DOESNT WANT TO START. IT IS ALMOST THERE. RUNS FOR A 15
SECONDS (POORLY) AND STOPS.
I WAS WONDERING IF WATER VAPOR IS STILL MIXING WITH THE FUEL ?

IS THERE A BOLT OR DRAIN I CAN NOT SEE ON THE MANIFOLD TO GET ANY WATER
OUT ?

RAINING AGAIN SO I WILL TRY AGAIN ON THURSDAY.

SONOFADOCKER


jamesgangnc wrote:
Good advice. Get it good and hot when you get it fired up. The heat
will evaporate the remaining water. Then check the oil again. If it
stays clear after that treatment then I would not worry about the
engine. You might want to check your exhaust flappers. If it's an
merc i/o they will be at the top of the pipe going down to the drive..

Mr Wizzard wrote:
"Eisboch" wrote in message
...

"sonofadocker" wrote in message
oups.com...


I think your engine is salvagable assuming no damage has been done other
than getting water in the oil.
I'll defer to the engine experts to give you the best advice as to how to
proceed from here.


Well, you kinda already answered his question - crank for
a while with plugs out, change oil, get her fired up, and make
sure to get it up to tempreture (to cook out all the moisture),
and run it for some time. Not sure an immeadiate second
oil change is necessary, the heat should cook it all out. But
certainly can't hurt.


if this is the case then some engine cranking with the plugs out and
another oil change might save the engine ?

Yes. And perhaps even another oil and filter change after that.






do you all think the motor is salvageable ???


Yes.
Sorry for your problems, but I think it can be fixed.

Eisboch





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