Greetings All ? new to the forum, and need some help
I?ve got a 2001 Volvo Penta 5.0GI with a temperature gauge that started reading 190 to 200 F last year. Put a new raw water pump in last year prior to launch and changed it again this year.
1) First thing I did last year was to replace the thermostat ? made no difference.
2) Also replaced the circulating pump ? that?s not the problem.
3) I?ve also checked the riser/manifolds with a laser indicator/infrared temp gauge ? riser and manifold temps are good (130 F).
4) Assumed it was the temp gauge, and replaced it ? no change in temp reading
5) By passed the out drive by feeding fresh water directly into the raw water pump ? no change.
Had a couple of mechanics that suggested that I run the boat without the thermostat and recheck the temp ? I did that for about 20 minutes after which time the engine started to run a little rough. Stopped the engine, and a week later tried to restart. But the engine would not start, turned over very roughly but would not catch. I checked all the spark plugs and they were all wet. My mechanic claimed this was this was a blown head gasket and over the winter ripped the engine down, machined the heads and rebuilt the engine.
Summer 2007 - Yupp, you guessed it, put the boat in the water and the temp gauge is back up to 190 ? 220 F. The mechanic is guessing that there is a exhaust leak getting into cooling sytem that is causing an erratic reading of the temp sensor by introducing bubbles around the sensor. So he put clear hoses on the thermostat housing leading the exhaust manifold. He claimed that if there were no bubbles in the water flowing thru the hose that we could rule out an exhaust leak. The port side hose was practically foam, the starboard side seemed reasonable. By the way ? we were running this test without a thermostat being in. In spite of the initial concern my mechanic had over an exhaust leak, ?don?t worry about it ? just run with out a thermostat?.
Does anyone have any ideas??
I?ve got a 2001 Volvo Penta 5.0GI with a temperature gauge that started reading 190 to 200 F last year. Put a new raw water pump in last year prior to launch and changed it again this year.
1) First thing I did last year was to replace the thermostat ? made no difference.
2) Also replaced the circulating pump ? that?s not the problem.
3) I?ve also checked the riser/manifolds with a laser indicator/infrared temp gauge ? riser and manifold temps are good (130 F).
4) Assumed it was the temp gauge, and replaced it ? no change in temp reading
5) By passed the out drive by feeding fresh water directly into the raw water pump ? no change.
Had a couple of mechanics that suggested that I run the boat without the thermostat and recheck the temp ? I did that for about 20 minutes after which time the engine started to run a little rough. Stopped the engine, and a week later tried to restart. But the engine would not start, turned over very roughly but would not catch. I checked all the spark plugs and they were all wet. My mechanic claimed this was this was a blown head gasket and over the winter ripped the engine down, machined the heads and rebuilt the engine.
Summer 2007 - Yupp, you guessed it, put the boat in the water and the temp gauge is back up to 190 ? 220 F. The mechanic is guessing that there is a exhaust leak getting into cooling sytem that is causing an erratic reading of the temp sensor by introducing bubbles around the sensor. So he put clear hoses on the thermostat housing leading the exhaust manifold. He claimed that if there were no bubbles in the water flowing thru the hose that we could rule out an exhaust leak. The port side hose was practically foam, the starboard side seemed reasonable. By the way ? we were running this test without a thermostat being in. In spite of the initial concern my mechanic had over an exhaust leak, ?don?t worry about it ? just run with out a thermostat?.
Does anyone have any ideas??