Hi All,
I live in the PNW where we have relatively mild winters but it does freeze from time to time, with a few weeks a year where we’ll have a cold snap with 3-4 days of sub-freezing temp days in a row. My engine is freshly rebuilt (16 hours now) and I’m hoping to squeeze a few more fishing/crabbing trips out of it before I have to put her away for the season. The engine has a “half” closed cooling system so the engine is safe but the exhaust manifolds and heat exchanger have raw water in them. Would there be any downside to not draining the manifolds and instead just winterizing them with the pink coolant via muffs in between trips when the temps are expected to dip below freezing?
Assuming we never have a prolonged deep freeze I might be able to make it through the winter using the boat every 2-3 weeks or so and then segue into the spring season. The outdrive and bellows were serviced while the engine was being rebuilt so I don’t see any reason to pull them again and if I’m lucky I may make it through to next season with only needing to change the oil and fuel water separator mid-season before doing a full winterize/service at the end of next season.
Is this a reasonable plan or am I asking for a disaster? Thanks for the advice!
I live in the PNW where we have relatively mild winters but it does freeze from time to time, with a few weeks a year where we’ll have a cold snap with 3-4 days of sub-freezing temp days in a row. My engine is freshly rebuilt (16 hours now) and I’m hoping to squeeze a few more fishing/crabbing trips out of it before I have to put her away for the season. The engine has a “half” closed cooling system so the engine is safe but the exhaust manifolds and heat exchanger have raw water in them. Would there be any downside to not draining the manifolds and instead just winterizing them with the pink coolant via muffs in between trips when the temps are expected to dip below freezing?
Assuming we never have a prolonged deep freeze I might be able to make it through the winter using the boat every 2-3 weeks or so and then segue into the spring season. The outdrive and bellows were serviced while the engine was being rebuilt so I don’t see any reason to pull them again and if I’m lucky I may make it through to next season with only needing to change the oil and fuel water separator mid-season before doing a full winterize/service at the end of next season.
Is this a reasonable plan or am I asking for a disaster? Thanks for the advice!