Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 6, 12:53*pm, Terry S wrote:
You will often get foaming when bleeding the air from a hydraulic system (you're mixing air and oil under pressure after all). Simply let it settle out for a day or two and recheck and re-top it off until you're running clean. -- Regards, * * * Dave Brown * * * Brown's Marina Ltd * * *http://brownsmarina.com/ Thanks to everyone who responded! That gives me peace of mind. It's been a couple of days now, I'll look at it again tonight and see what the level looks like. *Sounds like I should top it off, run it some more, rest, repeat until it quits foaming. Can't wait until next spring when I can get the boat back in the water with the t & t installed and working. I'm too damn old *:-) to be dragging that heavy 75 horse up manually. The boating season is too short here in Minnesota to waste time struggling with heavy outboards. P.S. The boat is a 1974 vintage Crestliner 15.5' , beautiful 70's orange and white, in near mint shape, tri hull with an almost square bow... I'm a retro guy and just love this old gal. The motor of course is classic Chrysler white with orange accents, matches up perfectly. If anyone would like to see a photo of my baby, let me know. Terry. Fire away, I'm sure others would like to see it, too! |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Actual boating question! | General | |||
Actual boating question! | General | |||
actual boating post. | General | |||
Boating/T-Top question | General | |||
An Actual Boating Post | General |