tango13
Petty Officer 3rd Class
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2015
- Messages
- 75
Hi all,
Long story short is that I've blown PS return line right at the cooler for the 3rd time now. 1995 7.4 Bravo 1. I kept trimming the hose where it would burst/crack, and kept reinstalling until i finally ran out of line length and ended up replacing the entire part with a new quicksilver line & fitting. Line blew twice during idle speeds and once at WOT. Blew twice on my own (1st and 3rd) and once on my mechanic while it was idling on muffs, who ended up pulling the cooler to inspect and found no issues on that end.
Just curious as to whether these older rubber lines are known to break down over time? I inspected the nipple on the cooler and the hose clamp and didn't see any visible sharp edges. I'm hoping the new hose holds up, as its a major PITA to clean up the mess of ATF in the bilge when it leaks and fix the hose end. Not to mention a new part was $$$ for what it was (now I understand why my mechanic wanted to avoid changing the whole unit).
Long story short is that I've blown PS return line right at the cooler for the 3rd time now. 1995 7.4 Bravo 1. I kept trimming the hose where it would burst/crack, and kept reinstalling until i finally ran out of line length and ended up replacing the entire part with a new quicksilver line & fitting. Line blew twice during idle speeds and once at WOT. Blew twice on my own (1st and 3rd) and once on my mechanic while it was idling on muffs, who ended up pulling the cooler to inspect and found no issues on that end.
Just curious as to whether these older rubber lines are known to break down over time? I inspected the nipple on the cooler and the hose clamp and didn't see any visible sharp edges. I'm hoping the new hose holds up, as its a major PITA to clean up the mess of ATF in the bilge when it leaks and fix the hose end. Not to mention a new part was $$$ for what it was (now I understand why my mechanic wanted to avoid changing the whole unit).