Wolfgheist
Seaman Apprentice
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2021
- Messages
- 37
Cannot find anyone affordable with time to look at the boat for several weeks, so will do what I can on my own. One of the guys told me to just fill the engine compartment with water to see where it leaks out, versus putting it in water and trying to see where it is coming in. He said just be sure I do not get water up to the starter or the starter will get ruined.Although replacing manifolds and changing fluids and other sorts of maintenance need to be done, it seems to me the #1 concern should be figuring out why you have so much water in your boat. If you discover a serious problem (e.g., a rotten transom), all those other become somewhat moot until you fix the boat or part it out.
At some point, the boat needs to be back in the water so you can try to find where the water's coming from. Also at some point, you'll need to figure out how to pull the drive so you can check the bellows, etc. Both of these need to be done, and I'm not sure it makes much difference in which order.
It's not 100% necessary that the drive is completely lowered to pull it. It does, however, make it much, much easier. (The real advantage in having the drive lowered comes when putting it back on; that's no fun if the trailer is too low.)
My trailer is sufficiently low that I cannot lower my drive completely - not even close - even if I lower the trailer tongue all the way. I just put a jack stand under the trailer tongue, then use bottle jacks to jack up the rear corners of the trailer until the back end of the boat is high enough for me lower the drive all the way. I then put jack stands under the rear corners of the trailer and pull the drive. The entire process, including pulling the drive, takes maybe 15 minutes.
If it were me, I'd figure out the water intrusion before spending a dime on new parts.
Is this legit advice?
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