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what oil?
I have a Mercruiser 5.7 with 450 hours built in 1988. I'm about to lay it
up for the season (northeast). Does anyone have a suggestion for engine oil? I'm inclined to use 10W30 Dino oil which is what I use in my car. The boat is new to me so I don't have a "what did you use last year" to go by. Any ideas would be appreciated? Thanks, David |
what oil?
"D&LBusch" wrote in message ... I have a Mercruiser 5.7 with 450 hours built in 1988. I'm about to lay it up for the season (northeast). Does anyone have a suggestion for engine oil? I'm inclined to use 10W30 Dino oil which is what I use in my car. The boat is new to me so I don't have a "what did you use last year" to go by. Any ideas would be appreciated? Thanks, David IIRC marine engines of that vintage call for straight 30 weight. Maybe someone more knowledgeable will confirm or correct. Eisboch |
what oil?
"D&LBusch" wrote in message ... I have a Mercruiser 5.7 with 450 hours built in 1988. I'm about to lay it up for the season (northeast). Does anyone have a suggestion for engine oil? I'm inclined to use 10W30 Dino oil which is what I use in my car. The boat is new to me so I don't have a "what did you use last year" to go by. Any ideas would be appreciated? Thanks, David I would call or email Mercury Marine: http://www.mercurymarine.com/contact_us |
what oil?
"D&LBusch" wrote in message ... I have a Mercruiser 5.7 with 450 hours built in 1988. I'm about to lay it up for the season (northeast). Does anyone have a suggestion for engine oil? I'm inclined to use 10W30 Dino oil which is what I use in my car. The boat is new to me so I don't have a "what did you use last year" to go by. Any ideas would be appreciated? Thanks, David Hard to go wrong with MerCruiser's own 4-Cycle engine oil. It's formulated to their specs for their engines. |
what oil?
"D&LBusch" wrote in message ... I have a Mercruiser 5.7 with 450 hours built in 1988. I'm about to lay it up for the season (northeast). Does anyone have a suggestion for engine oil? I'm inclined to use 10W30 Dino oil which is what I use in my car. The boat is new to me so I don't have a "what did you use last year" to go by. Any ideas would be appreciated? Thanks, David You may want to consider allowing your local marina winterize your boat. They will fog the engine, put stabilizer in the fuel tank, put oil in they cylinders, pull the outdrive and grease everything and then drain and fill all coolant passages with non-toxic antifreeze. It is a fairly major job and since the boat is new to you it is a good time for the mechanic to check out the lift system (top up the hydro oil), check out and grease the universals and so on. You may also want to get the drive gear oil changed. You can do this yourself at the same time you change the engine oil or let the marina do it. It is a simple job. To answer your question you should use 30wt oil. I would also tune it (plugs, rotor, distributor and new fuel filter) before winterizing it. The fuel filter looks like an oil filter usually mounted somewhere close to the engine. good luck, mark |
what oil?
"RG" wrote in message m... "D&LBusch" wrote in message ... I have a Mercruiser 5.7 with 450 hours built in 1988. I'm about to lay it up for the season (northeast). Does anyone have a suggestion for engine oil? I'm inclined to use 10W30 Dino oil which is what I use in my car. The boat is new to me so I don't have a "what did you use last year" to go by. Any ideas would be appreciated? Thanks, David Hard to go wrong with MerCruiser's own 4-Cycle engine oil. It's formulated to their specs for their engines. Multi weight is not recommended. Mercruiser blends 25W with 40W and adds STP or something similar. But straight 30W or 40W will do the job just as well. These engines typically die from over heating bad winterizing, or water injestion before they have bearing, piston, valve, or cam problems. Jim |
what oil?
"Shortwave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Sun, 1 Oct 2006 19:29:31 -0400, "r_d" wrote: To answer your question you should use 30wt oil. I would also tune it (plugs, rotor, distributor and new fuel filter) before winterizing it. The fuel filter looks like an oil filter usually mounted somewhere close to the engine. If I owned an inboard, I'd do the opposite - fog it, then change everything in the Spring. Then again, I'm an outboard guy - what do I know. :) I doubt it really matters. I guess it depends on how fast you want to drop it in at the beginning of the season. mark |
what oil?
"Jim" wrote in message ink.net... "RG" wrote in message m... "D&LBusch" wrote in message ... I have a Mercruiser 5.7 with 450 hours built in 1988. I'm about to lay it up for the season (northeast). Does anyone have a suggestion for engine oil? I'm inclined to use 10W30 Dino oil which is what I use in my car. The boat is new to me so I don't have a "what did you use last year" to go by. Any ideas would be appreciated? Thanks, David Hard to go wrong with MerCruiser's own 4-Cycle engine oil. It's formulated to their specs for their engines. Multi weight is not recommended. Mercruiser blends 25W with 40W and adds STP or something similar. But straight 30W or 40W will do the job just as well. These engines typically die from over heating bad winterizing, or water injestion before they have bearing, piston, valve, or cam problems. Jim So who's recommending a multi-weight? By multi-weight, I assume you mean multi-viscosity, which the MerCruiser is not, and it appears you know that. |
what oil?
"RG" wrote in message .. . "Jim" wrote in message ink.net... "RG" wrote in message m... "D&LBusch" wrote in message ... I have a Mercruiser 5.7 with 450 hours built in 1988. I'm about to lay it up for the season (northeast). Does anyone have a suggestion for engine oil? I'm inclined to use 10W30 Dino oil which is what I use in my car. The boat is new to me so I don't have a "what did you use last year" to go by. Any ideas would be appreciated? Thanks, David Hard to go wrong with MerCruiser's own 4-Cycle engine oil. It's formulated to their specs for their engines. Multi weight is not recommended. Mercruiser blends 25W with 40W and adds STP or something similar. But straight 30W or 40W will do the job just as well. These engines typically die from over heating bad winterizing, or water injestion before they have bearing, piston, valve, or cam problems. Jim So who's recommending a multi-weight? By multi-weight, I assume you mean multi-viscosity, which the MerCruiser is not, and it appears you know that. The original poster asked if it was OK to use it. Jim |
what oil?
So who's recommending a multi-weight? By multi-weight, I assume you mean
multi-viscosity, which the MerCruiser is not, and it appears you know that. The original poster asked if it was OK to use it. I completely missed that. Apologies. |
what oil?
Shortwave Sportfishing wrote:
On Sun, 1 Oct 2006 19:29:31 -0400, "r_d" wrote: To answer your question you should use 30wt oil. I would also tune it (plugs, rotor, distributor and new fuel filter) before winterizing it. The fuel filter looks like an oil filter usually mounted somewhere close to the engine. If I owned an inboard, I'd do the opposite - fog it, then change everything in the Spring. Then again, I'm an outboard guy - what do I know. :) You definitely want to change the oil when you winterize, you don't want the "acid oil" sitting around all winter. |
what oil?
Shortwave Sportfishing wrote:
On Mon, 02 Oct 2006 01:22:24 -0400, "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote: Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 1 Oct 2006 19:29:31 -0400, "r_d" wrote: To answer your question you should use 30wt oil. I would also tune it (plugs, rotor, distributor and new fuel filter) before winterizing it. The fuel filter looks like an oil filter usually mounted somewhere close to the engine. If I owned an inboard, I'd do the opposite - fog it, then change everything in the Spring. Then again, I'm an outboard guy - what do I know. :) You definitely want to change the oil when you winterize, you don't want the "acid oil" sitting around all winter. Like I said, I'm a outboard guy. :) Outboard is definitely easier to winterize. I do the engine maintenance when i winterize, and then wash and wax the boat in the spring time. It takes about an hour to flush out the fresh water system and attach the hoses to the engine. By doing the engine / outdrive work in the winter, you keep your recommissioning down to one day. I have always carried my batteries home because someone told me that the freezing weather is bad for a battery. If this is not the case, it would be nice to leave the batteries on the boat. |
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