kenny nunez
Captain
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2017
- Messages
- 3,290
A good time to look at the through hull intakes. Does your boat have one for each engine?
Yes, one for each engine, extra one for genny on the bottom of the boat. We did check the flow while boat was in the water and there was water coming freely, but will physically check them anyway. Both filters were clean.A good time to look at the through hull intakes. Does your boat have one for each engine?
Issue is, that NO ALARMS, NO BEEPS - nothing. Just cracks on the bloody manifold. Temps are fine, water and oil pressure is fine. Old gauges are not too reliable, they have been showing funny numbers all the time I owned the boat. One engine has been from the day one slower to speed up..Converting your readings from kPa to psi you have about 14 psi on the starboard engine and 20 on the port engine, not sure if that can cause a problem, did you get a trouble code for low water pressure? I know on my brother's boat he did and it limited the RPM due to the low water flow, he had only about 180*F on the gauge though. Your temps on both engines are pretty equal the read out is about 150-154, although the gauges read higher like 170...
You are also losing about 350 or so rpm on the starboard side.
Still the evidence doesn't add up. I'd think if you're cracking manifolds due to low water flow the starboard side engine would be running a good bit hotter.
Probably one of iboat's top ten inboard engine mysteries.
All cracked manifolds are aftermarket ones and from two different brands - hard to get other in Estonia. We checked the surface and it was straight...
Getting back to the problem, cracking manifolds, if it isn't water flow, then I'm thinking it must be related to expansion when the engine heats up, I'm still wondering if the cyl head mating surface isn't even and when the manifold is torqued down but then heated, it is flexing unevenly and cracking.
Now I don't remember but have all the cracked ones been aftermarket, and not Mercruiser? If that's true I'd go at it again, use either a Merc or Barr manifold, measure the flatness of the mating surface, make sure that those bolts thread ALL the way in, for even clamping force, and keep your fingers crossed or as the Brits like to say "touch wood" lol!