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when to change raw water impeller
On Sun, 16 Sep 2007 21:26:50 -0700, JR North
wrote: John H. wrote: On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 18:10:07 -0400, trainfan1 wrote: Chad wrote: How often do you change your raw water impellers for your motors? 1973 Evinrude 115: Last changed in 1992. 1981 Evinrude 115: Last changed prior to my purchase in 1997. 1972 Johnson 6: Never changed since new. This one gets the most use. 1973 Correct Craft Ford inboard(~45 hrs./yr): Last changed before my purchase in 1998. All used in a sandy bottom shallow lake. Courage? lunacy. The only time I've ever changed an impeller was when I noticed that the water pressure was a little low on one FICHT I had on the original Contender. It must have sucked up a piece of sea weed or something. Changing one every two years is over kill in my opinion. Other than that, I can't think of a time I've ever changed one other than an older Merc that I rebuilt one time. |
when to change raw water impeller
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Sun, 16 Sep 2007 21:26:50 -0700, JR North wrote: John H. wrote: On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 18:10:07 -0400, trainfan1 wrote: Chad wrote: How often do you change your raw water impellers for your motors? 1973 Evinrude 115: Last changed in 1992. 1981 Evinrude 115: Last changed prior to my purchase in 1997. 1972 Johnson 6: Never changed since new. This one gets the most use. 1973 Correct Craft Ford inboard(~45 hrs./yr): Last changed before my purchase in 1998. All used in a sandy bottom shallow lake. Courage? lunacy. The only time I've ever changed an impeller was when I noticed that the water pressure was a little low on one FICHT I had on the original Contender. It must have sucked up a piece of sea weed or something. Changing one every two years is over kill in my opinion. Other than that, I can't think of a time I've ever changed one other than an older Merc that I rebuilt one time. Factory OEM parts last a lot longer too. There are outboards on out lake from the 50's & 60's that have never had an impeller change-out. Rob |
when to change raw water impeller
JimH wrote:
"trainfan1" wrote in message et... Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 16 Sep 2007 21:26:50 -0700, JR North wrote: John H. wrote: On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 18:10:07 -0400, trainfan1 wrote: Chad wrote: How often do you change your raw water impellers for your motors? 1973 Evinrude 115: Last changed in 1992. 1981 Evinrude 115: Last changed prior to my purchase in 1997. 1972 Johnson 6: Never changed since new. This one gets the most use. 1973 Correct Craft Ford inboard(~45 hrs./yr): Last changed before my purchase in 1998. All used in a sandy bottom shallow lake. Courage? lunacy. The only time I've ever changed an impeller was when I noticed that the water pressure was a little low on one FICHT I had on the original Contender. It must have sucked up a piece of sea weed or something. Changing one every two years is over kill in my opinion. Other than that, I can't think of a time I've ever changed one other than an older Merc that I rebuilt one time. Factory OEM parts last a lot longer too. There are outboards on out lake from the 50's & 60's that have never had an impeller change-out. Rob Until I purchased it in 2005 my 1997 Glastron spent it's entire life on an inland lake and trailered. Starting in 2005 it's new life was on Lake Erie with a lot of time anchored near beaches in sandy water. I have to back over a sand bar to get near the beach, kicking up sand while running in reverse. The impellor failed last year causing some major damage to the engine due to the engine overheating. It also caused me to be towed in twice last year. I will continue to change mine out every two years. It is cheap insurance for me. Is this something you do yourself or do you have a mechanic do it? I've never owned an I/O, and therefore, obviously, know nothing other than the generalities, about I/O innards. In the good old days, my father let me change the impellers on the lower units of customer outboards, but in those days it was a simple, straightforward mechanical operation. These days, I wouldn't attempt "mechanical" work on a modern, high-tech outboard beyond fluid replacement. |
when to change raw water impeller
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 08:23:50 -0400, "JimH" ask wrote:
I will continue to change mine out every two years. It is cheap insurance for me. Nothing wrong with that if you use the motor a lot, overkill for others. Operating time is a better guage, probably somewhere around 300 to 400 hours unless you run a lot in shallow water. |
when to change raw water impeller
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when to change raw water impeller
On Sep 17, 8:39 am, HK wrote:
JimH wrote: "trainfan1" wrote in message news:WbOdnZp3bqb28XPbnZ2dnUVZ_u7inZ2d@usadatanet. net... Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: On Sun, 16 Sep 2007 21:26:50 -0700, JR North wrote: John H. wrote: On Sat, 15 Sep 2007 18:10:07 -0400, trainfan1 wrote: Chad wrote: How often do you change your raw water impellers for your motors? 1973 Evinrude 115: Last changed in 1992. 1981 Evinrude 115: Last changed prior to my purchase in 1997. 1972 Johnson 6: Never changed since new. This one gets the most use. 1973 Correct Craft Ford inboard(~45 hrs./yr): Last changed before my purchase in 1998. All used in a sandy bottom shallow lake. Courage? lunacy. The only time I've ever changed an impeller was when I noticed that the water pressure was a little low on one FICHT I had on the original Contender. It must have sucked up a piece of sea weed or something. Changing one every two years is over kill in my opinion. Other than that, I can't think of a time I've ever changed one other than an older Merc that I rebuilt one time. Factory OEM parts last a lot longer too. There are outboards on out lake from the 50's & 60's that have never had an impeller change-out. Rob Until I purchased it in 2005 my 1997 Glastron spent it's entire life on an inland lake and trailered. Starting in 2005 it's new life was on Lake Erie with a lot of time anchored near beaches in sandy water. I have to back over a sand bar to get near the beach, kicking up sand while running in reverse. The impellor failed last year causing some major damage to the engine due to the engine overheating. It also caused me to be towed in twice last year. I will continue to change mine out every two years. It is cheap insurance for me. Is this something you do yourself or do you have a mechanic do it? I've never owned an I/O, and therefore, obviously, know nothing other than the generalities, about I/O innards. In the good old days, my father let me change the impellers on the lower units of customer outboards, but in those days it was a simple, straightforward mechanical operation. These days, I wouldn't attempt "mechanical" work on a modern, high-tech outboard beyond fluid replacement.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Similar to a big outboard. |
when to change raw water impeller
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when to change raw water impeller
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 12:55:11 -0400, "Reginald P. Smithers III"
wrote: Or even worse when it breaks and you don't notice the temp has risen until it has caused major damage. Score another advantage for ETEC. They shut off at 194 degrees until it cools down, then go into SAFE mode so you can get back. ETEC RULES!!!! |
when to change raw water impeller
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Mon, 17 Sep 2007 12:55:11 -0400, "Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote: Or even worse when it breaks and you don't notice the temp has risen until it has caused major damage. Score another advantage for ETEC. They shut off at 194 degrees until it cools down, then go into SAFE mode so you can get back. ETEC RULES!!!! Those high tech engines will never work. ;) But they do have one hell of a web site. |
when to change raw water impeller
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