Re: OMC SEADRIVE water ingestion
Typical injestion is as you describe. Damage is worse at the top and bottom of the crank and better toward the center. <br /><br />A mist of water is pulled in through the air intake into the air box. There water goes to the lower bearing via that small hose at the bottom and then is pumped to the top bearing via the reflow system.<br /><br />There are a couple of things to look for because it will happen again if we don't stop the cause. Keep in mind the damaged crank is a result, not the cause. The problem could be that the unit is mounted too low which is not unusual with Sea Drives. The water can also come from something mounted on the transom like a transducer, speedometer pick up, ect.<br /><br />If this has been a problem since it was new, most likely it's too low. If this is a new problem then look at something that has been changed, added, moved, ect. Has anything been added like mentioned or even a fin? <br /><br />By the way, it's very easy to pressure check an outboard block but in this case I think you are right, it's injestion from an outside source.<br /><br />Hope this helps. Good luck!