pachanga58
Cadet
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2021
- Messages
- 18
Here's is an unique question, at least for me. I searched the forums, did not see this question in the forums.
Boat - 1989 Sea Ray Pachanga, 27ft. Twin 5.7 Mercruisers. Alpha drives. about 750 hours on each motor. Exhaust through water lift mufflers through the hull, not through the props. The eight cylinders feed into a single exhaust for each motor. on the lake, Port motor started showing a higher than normal temperature - 200 degrees rather than 145 degree while idling through a no-wake zone. the starboard motor temperature was right on the money 145 degrees. I shut the port engine down. Once out of the no-wake zone, I restarted the port motor and accelerated to plane speed. Port motor temperature came down to approximately 150 degrees, but not the 145 that I expect it to be. Watched it closely... powered down and once the boat fell off of plane , the temperature on the port side started rising. so I decided to shut the motor off again and just sort of go real slow back to home. The starboard motor will not bring this boat back on plane. Now, get home, pulled the boat out of the water, and hooked up muffs on the starboard motor and all was good - temperature was 145 degrees - good water flow out the exhaust. Hooked up the Port motor. No water flow other than a few drops out the port motor exhaust at 800RPM. Obviously the same effect - temperature started rising quickly - shut the motor off at 180 degrees. Looking at the flowchart for a raw water diagram to the cooling system, the inlet water that would be picked up in the outdrive is routed through the oil/power steering cooler and on to the inlet (lower right) on the thermostat housing. I am thinking that very possibly that the impeller in the outdrive is not during its job anymore and needs to be replaced- however, I also have always thought that on plane, water is not being pumped up (per se) by the impeller but the intake on the outdrive provides the water to the motor by water pressure from the water flowing over the intakes on the drive when on plane. Is that a true statement or not? As is, the motor temps only go high when at idle. On plane the temps are 5 degrees higher that the starboard motor. Now for the crazy question. If I were to put a tee into the starboard motor's intake of the water from the lake that goes to the intake of the thermostat housing, and use the water that is being pumped by the starboard motor to supply the port motor's thermostat housing and thus provide water water to the port moto's water pump - will the starboard engine provide enough water at idle to cool the port motor sufficiently? a crazy question, but there is a couple of reasons... one, I will have the impeller in the port motor' outdrive replaced, but I just am curious as hell if this may give the port motor enough water to cool it. I am thinking if this works - I may have to work me out a "kit" if this every happens again and I get back to the slip in a reasonable amount of time instead of slowly idling back for 5 miles and taking hours.
of course - this is one of the "No. don't do that" - I figure you guys will let me know in so many ways.
Boat - 1989 Sea Ray Pachanga, 27ft. Twin 5.7 Mercruisers. Alpha drives. about 750 hours on each motor. Exhaust through water lift mufflers through the hull, not through the props. The eight cylinders feed into a single exhaust for each motor. on the lake, Port motor started showing a higher than normal temperature - 200 degrees rather than 145 degree while idling through a no-wake zone. the starboard motor temperature was right on the money 145 degrees. I shut the port engine down. Once out of the no-wake zone, I restarted the port motor and accelerated to plane speed. Port motor temperature came down to approximately 150 degrees, but not the 145 that I expect it to be. Watched it closely... powered down and once the boat fell off of plane , the temperature on the port side started rising. so I decided to shut the motor off again and just sort of go real slow back to home. The starboard motor will not bring this boat back on plane. Now, get home, pulled the boat out of the water, and hooked up muffs on the starboard motor and all was good - temperature was 145 degrees - good water flow out the exhaust. Hooked up the Port motor. No water flow other than a few drops out the port motor exhaust at 800RPM. Obviously the same effect - temperature started rising quickly - shut the motor off at 180 degrees. Looking at the flowchart for a raw water diagram to the cooling system, the inlet water that would be picked up in the outdrive is routed through the oil/power steering cooler and on to the inlet (lower right) on the thermostat housing. I am thinking that very possibly that the impeller in the outdrive is not during its job anymore and needs to be replaced- however, I also have always thought that on plane, water is not being pumped up (per se) by the impeller but the intake on the outdrive provides the water to the motor by water pressure from the water flowing over the intakes on the drive when on plane. Is that a true statement or not? As is, the motor temps only go high when at idle. On plane the temps are 5 degrees higher that the starboard motor. Now for the crazy question. If I were to put a tee into the starboard motor's intake of the water from the lake that goes to the intake of the thermostat housing, and use the water that is being pumped by the starboard motor to supply the port motor's thermostat housing and thus provide water water to the port moto's water pump - will the starboard engine provide enough water at idle to cool the port motor sufficiently? a crazy question, but there is a couple of reasons... one, I will have the impeller in the port motor' outdrive replaced, but I just am curious as hell if this may give the port motor enough water to cool it. I am thinking if this works - I may have to work me out a "kit" if this every happens again and I get back to the slip in a reasonable amount of time instead of slowly idling back for 5 miles and taking hours.
of course - this is one of the "No. don't do that" - I figure you guys will let me know in so many ways.