mikeincolo
Cadet
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2019
- Messages
- 9
I pulled my 2008 Sea Ray 185 Sport with 4.3L V6 MerCruiser our of storage (Colorado), inspected, hooked up hose, started right up, ran to temp, all good with oil pressure, temp, sounded great. Then performed lake test. Let it warm up, then ran at 3000rpm for about a mile or 2... milkshake coming out of valve cover breather hose to spark arrester.
Shut it down, got it home, did compression test: all spark plugs looked good and not wet, compression was 130psi except cylinder #4 was 100psi. Drained oil, let it drain for a couple of days, and got about 3 gallons of milkshake out. Note: thick milkshake drained very slowly, tried manual vacuum pump with at least 500 pumps - and it was just too thick to get pulled up and out.
Removed exhaust risers and manifolds, looked good, removed valve covers, lotsa milkshake but looked good otherwise, removed intake manifold, gaskets looked fine and... it was cracked on the underside, starboard side. I figured I was in this deep so I might as well pull the heads to have them magnafluxed and reman'd. shop reported back that cylinder head on starboard side had a leaky valve which explains the lower compression on cylinder #4.
Waiting on new intake manifold, will reassemble and post again.
Question: Contemplating how I will clean out the milkshake from motor. Spec is 20w-40 NMMA FC-W rated oils, synthetic preferred. Thinking I will rebuild, add oil/filter, run at temp for 30 mins, change oil/filter and run on lake for a few hours, monitor. Maybe use non-synthetic with Marvelous Mystery Oil for the 1st oil cleaning / relubricating process.
Big takeaway - when winterizing remove plug from intake manifold to drain water, in addition to all the blue plugs, etc.
Question: Does anyone have experience and advice for the first run of the motor after reassembling - with the objective of cleaning up the milkshake WITHOUT seizing/breaking anything. That said, any other sage advice?
Thanks in advance, Mike
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Shut it down, got it home, did compression test: all spark plugs looked good and not wet, compression was 130psi except cylinder #4 was 100psi. Drained oil, let it drain for a couple of days, and got about 3 gallons of milkshake out. Note: thick milkshake drained very slowly, tried manual vacuum pump with at least 500 pumps - and it was just too thick to get pulled up and out.
Removed exhaust risers and manifolds, looked good, removed valve covers, lotsa milkshake but looked good otherwise, removed intake manifold, gaskets looked fine and... it was cracked on the underside, starboard side. I figured I was in this deep so I might as well pull the heads to have them magnafluxed and reman'd. shop reported back that cylinder head on starboard side had a leaky valve which explains the lower compression on cylinder #4.
Waiting on new intake manifold, will reassemble and post again.
Question: Contemplating how I will clean out the milkshake from motor. Spec is 20w-40 NMMA FC-W rated oils, synthetic preferred. Thinking I will rebuild, add oil/filter, run at temp for 30 mins, change oil/filter and run on lake for a few hours, monitor. Maybe use non-synthetic with Marvelous Mystery Oil for the 1st oil cleaning / relubricating process.
Big takeaway - when winterizing remove plug from intake manifold to drain water, in addition to all the blue plugs, etc.
Question: Does anyone have experience and advice for the first run of the motor after reassembling - with the objective of cleaning up the milkshake WITHOUT seizing/breaking anything. That said, any other sage advice?
Thanks in advance, Mike
Attachments
IMG_20220703_104209.jpg
IMG_20220703_104209.jpg
3.7 MB · Views: 4
IMG_20220722_113814.jpg
IMG_20220722_113814.jpg
3.4 MB · Views: 4
IMG_20220722_124721.jpg
IMG_20220722_124721.jpg
3.6 MB · Views: 4
IMG_20220722_184006.jpg
IMG_20220722_184006.jpg
2.9 MB · Views: 4