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On May 14, 11:58*am, wrote:
ALso make sure that you have reassembled the thermostat housing properly and that the plastic poppers are working freely.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I agree with the last work done being the probable culprit. As I think about it, the plastic poppers may be a little looser than they should be (my fault, but easy to fix), if so, do you think the pressure could force only one side open sending water to the port and not starboard in this case? I'm going to pull the riser and check the manifold for anything visible, they need to be replaced as a preventative measure anyway. My risers are stainless. The boat was a freshwater boat most of its life, this is year 3 in the salt. I have to admit a few of the manifold bolts were pretty frozen and rusted round so I put the project off hoping to get another season as they may need to be cut off by a pro. *Bad idea, I know. *I often flush with fresh water and at least run the engine 3-4 times a week to keep water flowing and crap from building up the best I can. I'm going to check my flapper also, I replaced the port one last season because it was making noise, I should have done starboard at the same time but I was in a if aint broke don't fix it mood. Thanks While you're in the thermostat housing check the thermostat. You want the lower temp one if you're in salt water now. Keeping the water temp lower will reduce the corrosive effects of the salt water some. If your boat was originally in fresh water that would explain why it had 160. Pulling the risers will probably give you some idea of the condition of the manifolds. I'd go that route and then decide from there. It may be that you can clean out any blockage and get back on the water for another season. The bolts on the manifolds often get stuck. You can cut the bolt heads off the offending bolts with a dremel and slide the manifold off in many installations. Then it's easy to soak the bolt threads where they go into the engine heads with wd40 or your favorite penetrating oil for a few days. Then they usualy will come out using vise grips on the bolt shaft. |
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