Post pictures of these gasket faces,....
OK
The new manifold arrived today, supplied with gaskets. I expect the other side manifold (the other side doesn't seem to be getting water in engine cylinders) also won't have any gaskets fitted so today I ordered the same gasket set that was supplied with the new manifold so I can fit gaskets on the other side of the engine.
And the 'new' prop arrived, I fitted it just to make sure it fits, I forgot to take pictures. It's not really new but a reconditioned stainless 14.5 x 19 pitch 'Ballistic' brand stainless prop.
Didn't even take the cover off the boat today. Had some work to do in the morning. Thought about taking the cover off the boat and running some more tests etc but then I thought... I could remove the inlet manifold, check/remove the cam, remove heads all with the engine still in the boat... But I still might not find anything wrong with those components, the problem could still be rod knock so the engine might still need to come out and I might even find the block is cracked. I spent a lot of time today looking online for a replacement engine and phoning around. I could buy a rebuilt car/truck engine for £3k+ but I'd rather spend half that on a known good engine from a crashed car/truck, just that we don't see many good condition but not newly rebuilt Ford 302's / 351's for sale in the UK. it seems engine builders buy up what they can and rebuild them to sell as reconditioned. I spoke to my former customer today who owns a lot of American vehicles, he has a lot of contacts. He's going to phone some of his contacts for me tomorrow to ask if any of them have a 302 or 351 in good running order but not rebuilt that I could buy. If that doesn't work out I might buy a 1994 roller cam 351W engine that came out of a pickup that was 'written off' (insurance write off so the vehicle scrapped but the seller has the good engine) with 80000 miles for £1400. The 351W doesn't have an inlet manifold, obviously I'd need to buy one. It comes with the truck dizzy and I've learned my boat's dizzy won't fit. I've been told conflicting things about the oil pans 302 vs 351, some say they're interchangeable some say they're not, the 351W seller says the engine has an oil pan that isn't deep so should work in the boat. I've checked Ebay and the internet for a 351 2 barrel inlet manifold (so I could re-use my existing carb) and for a marine spec dizzy for the 351 but haven't found anything in the UK so far. Heh, a bit ironic because I could buy a performance aluminium intake, special carbs, supercharger upgrade, etc today!
Any thoughts about any problems I might run into fitting the truck 351 engine into my boat that currently has the 302? Things I'm wondering about are rear main (crank) seal differences (if there's a difference 2 part / 1 part seal will it matter), oil pan, someone mentioned oil pump drive? Inlet manifold is wider on the 351, dizzy is different (longer?) on 351, will my 2bbl Holley work OK with the 351? Maybe I've forgotten something...
Michigan Motorz has the 5.8L (351 ci) Ford Marine Engine in stock. Ford 5.8L (351W) marine engine. This motor has been professionally remanufactured to meet or exceed OEM marine engine stock specifications. This 5.8L Ford engine is rated at 260-310hp at t
www.michiganmotorz.com
This with a nice Holley 650 CFM carb would wake that boat up.
Not sure what a Four Winns Sundowner weighs but I can tell you that my Four Winns 20' bow rider weighs in at 4200 lbs.
Mine has a 4.3 V6 which is just adequate, it should have had a 5.7.
I'd love to but but the missus wouldn't be impressed hehe, by the time I'd bought the carb and paid import taxes it would be very expensive. I'd expect our boats (same make and close to same length) to be around the same weight. Might even expect my cuddy to weigh more than your bowrider(?) but I thought mine weighed closer to 3500 lbs than 4200 lbs.
I expect my engine in it's current condition makes less power than your 4.3. But I aim to put my engine back to close to what it should be, as said above might even upgrade to a 351 (5.8).
I understand the potential problems associated with the concept of 'reversion', exhaust valve remaining open into the induction stroke and potential for sucking water into cylinders... But I wouldn't expect many modern cams (even mild performance) to have such valve overlap? Surely we could make a few changes and increase the power of these engines without needing to worry about reversion? I wouldn't try to go over the top but surely 250hp from the 302 or 300 hp from the 351 is do-able without causing reversion, lack of torque at low rpms or less than smooth idle problems on these engines? I know someone who fitted a Nissan VQ35 in a boat, 3.5L and 240hp, I know it won't have as much low or midrange torque but it'll pull 6000rpm for long periods.
I'm now thinking a bit more about buying and fitting the £1400 351 engine. I'd change it's freeze plugs before fitting because some of them are impossible or difficult to change if the engine is fitted in the boat, I'd have to swap the water pump in from my marine 302 (in fact I need to ask will that fit the 302?) but I wouldn't rush to fit marine head gaskets (which I've ordered today), I'd use it on fresh water to prove it then fit marine head gaskets before using it on salt water.