BenchmarkMarine
Cadet
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2022
- Messages
- 7
Hi,
I have a 1997 5.7l Mercruiser with an Alpha 1 Gen II outdrive. I pulled the outdrive last week for maintenance and had a large amount (1qt by rough estimate) of gear lube come flooding out of the gimbal bellows area. This seems wrong to me. I purchased the boat 2 years ago and this is the first time I've taken the upper unit out. Previously had only pulled the lower unit so that I could service the water pump.
I have read through this forum about possible causes for gear lube in the bellows. i've also read the nice 'oil leaks' writeup in the technical information section. I also pressure tested the outdrive to 10 psi as an assembled unit, thinking I would find a leak at the seal behind the u-joints. From reading multiple sources, it seems this is usually blamed. But actually the drive has been holding 10 psi for a few hours and a soapy spray did not show any leak in that area.
What I did see, however, was gear lube oozing down the shaft leading from the upper unit into the lower unit, where it is visible at the exhaust channel. I was expecting to see a larger leak since there was so much lube in the bellows, but I'm wondering if this could have built up to such a level over multiple years. The only path I see is up the shift shaft at the seal to the gimbal bell housing, and then across the shift lever into the bellows. Just wanting to confirm if this seems logical. If you get a chance to look at the pictures I uploaded, there is quite a bit of milkiness or light colored gunk at the shift lever area, but the oil within the bellows was just black with greenish tint like gear oil.
I should note that the boat has been parked in my garage for months and there was never any oil on the ground. The boat ran trouble-free on the water, though there was definitely signs of oil leak as the lube monitor jug would show loss of lube, and there were some slight signs of oil in the water if we idled. I have only used the boat on fresh water, though there are some signs that at some point in its prior life it had been in salty conditions.
Thanks.
I have a 1997 5.7l Mercruiser with an Alpha 1 Gen II outdrive. I pulled the outdrive last week for maintenance and had a large amount (1qt by rough estimate) of gear lube come flooding out of the gimbal bellows area. This seems wrong to me. I purchased the boat 2 years ago and this is the first time I've taken the upper unit out. Previously had only pulled the lower unit so that I could service the water pump.
I have read through this forum about possible causes for gear lube in the bellows. i've also read the nice 'oil leaks' writeup in the technical information section. I also pressure tested the outdrive to 10 psi as an assembled unit, thinking I would find a leak at the seal behind the u-joints. From reading multiple sources, it seems this is usually blamed. But actually the drive has been holding 10 psi for a few hours and a soapy spray did not show any leak in that area.
What I did see, however, was gear lube oozing down the shaft leading from the upper unit into the lower unit, where it is visible at the exhaust channel. I was expecting to see a larger leak since there was so much lube in the bellows, but I'm wondering if this could have built up to such a level over multiple years. The only path I see is up the shift shaft at the seal to the gimbal bell housing, and then across the shift lever into the bellows. Just wanting to confirm if this seems logical. If you get a chance to look at the pictures I uploaded, there is quite a bit of milkiness or light colored gunk at the shift lever area, but the oil within the bellows was just black with greenish tint like gear oil.
I should note that the boat has been parked in my garage for months and there was never any oil on the ground. The boat ran trouble-free on the water, though there was definitely signs of oil leak as the lube monitor jug would show loss of lube, and there were some slight signs of oil in the water if we idled. I have only used the boat on fresh water, though there are some signs that at some point in its prior life it had been in salty conditions.
Thanks.