I'll try to make this as non-confusing as possible . I'm trying to find the source of the water that is affecting the engine. The engine is a 5.7-liter Volvo Penta V8, inboard/outboard.
Issue:
what I found:
What I've done so far:
The next step I can see is to replace the head and intake gaskets. I sure don't want to go there just to find out there is something fishy with those new manifolds even though they held pressure (issue occurred after I installed them, can't remember if immediately or not).
Looking for experienced opinions:
Can the exhaust ports rust from water entering the intake? My brain says no after its burned or steamed with the fuel and sent out the exhaust.
Do the rusted exhaust ports indicate the water is coming from the exhaust manifold side?
If so, how can the water get into the intake and effect the way the boat runs from the exhaust port side, how's it going to get to the intake from there?
Although I highly doubt it does anyone think a crack in the cast iron manifolds or risers could hold 50 lbs. of air and open when the engine gets hot?
This is an older engine, but always ran great. I wanted to bounce this off some of you guys who may be long time Volvo Penta mechanics. You guys might just say "bite the bullet, inspect the water jackets and change the gaskets, if it still does it throw those Chinese manifolds in the garbage and get new ones". It's just so much work if it's the stupid manifold or riser on that side.
Thanks
Issue:
Boat randomly, inconsistently sputtering and hesitating under power. White milky smut on oil filler caps and in blow by tubes (if you clean the tubes and run it you can see water droplets in the tubes. It's obvious water is getting into the intake causing the boat to run like described).
what I found:
Milky snot on oil filler caps, underside of valve covers and in blow by tubes to carburetor.
The two center exhaust ports and valves on the starboard side are rusted (oh ****) port side is nice.
Water sitting in the same two cylinders (small amount, Double oh ****).
There is not a drop of water in the engine oil.
What I've done so far:
Pumped 2 liters of fuel from the supply line on the fuel tank to see if water is present. No water present.
Pressure tested exhaust manifolds and risers separately and assembled. (Newer Chinese made exhaust manifolds and elbows. Castings suck but they held 50 lbs. of air). Only ran these a few times since new.
What I'm thinking of doing:The next step I can see is to replace the head and intake gaskets. I sure don't want to go there just to find out there is something fishy with those new manifolds even though they held pressure (issue occurred after I installed them, can't remember if immediately or not).
Looking for experienced opinions:
Can the exhaust ports rust from water entering the intake? My brain says no after its burned or steamed with the fuel and sent out the exhaust.
Do the rusted exhaust ports indicate the water is coming from the exhaust manifold side?
If so, how can the water get into the intake and effect the way the boat runs from the exhaust port side, how's it going to get to the intake from there?
Although I highly doubt it does anyone think a crack in the cast iron manifolds or risers could hold 50 lbs. of air and open when the engine gets hot?
This is an older engine, but always ran great. I wanted to bounce this off some of you guys who may be long time Volvo Penta mechanics. You guys might just say "bite the bullet, inspect the water jackets and change the gaskets, if it still does it throw those Chinese manifolds in the garbage and get new ones". It's just so much work if it's the stupid manifold or riser on that side.
Thanks