I put my plugs back in, too, after the engine has drained. The last thing I want to do is hang upside down in the engine bay so I can use a thread chaser to clean out rusty threads. If the water has all drained out, there's no harm in reinstalling them. (Plus, that's one less thing for me to forget to do in the Spring!)Chris, manual says to screw back in to prevent rust.. however I would like to leave my plugs off , Did it once and it worked but im afraid of rusting (?)
might have to order a set of those. The one was pretty tight but the other 4 came out without much trouble.Yes there should be o rings on each plug. They may have fallen off when removed and are in the bilge, or since no water came out the drains are clogged. Try to clear as Scott mentioned
The thing on the starboard side is the knock sensor. The knock sensor is tied in with the TBV ignition
I use these instead of the blue plugs, they won't break off
https://www.hardin-marine.com/p-810...mercruiser-22-806608a02-8m2000874-5-pack.aspx
Cool. ThanksThe PS cooler will self drain because its behind and on top the bell housing. If either the hose on the water pump or the one feeding the thermostat housing is removed and lowered to the bilge it drains
Possibly but it's too cramped for me to sit in there trying to get it. I need to remove the pump anyway to replace the impeller so that might be the easier way then when I put it back together I will turn the clamps the right way for next timeMaybe you can get to those hose clamp screws with a universal joint socket attachment or a flexible socket extension.
7" might be what mine should be but mine is really small compared to the plastic housing. At first I thought maybe it wasn't even there. Its about 3-4" smaller than the lid. The lid is roughly 8" so guessing 5"? Definitely not 7" cause then it would only be in about 1/2" from the lid. But gonna have to pull it and measure it. If I have to I'll order the whole thing cause my plastic is cracked a little too but then I'd have to figure out how to get the sticker off the old one...lolstick a wire up the plug fittings and bust the crud loose
measure it. a 7" spark arrestor is standard.
This is what my housing looks like > https://www.partsvu.com/arrestor-fl...BYbjCpONUWEZEX74ydW5PXcaw8QrDdfxoCcuUQAvD_BwE7" might be what mine should be but mine is really small compared to the plastic housing. At first I thought maybe it wasn't even there. Its about 3-4" smaller than the lid. The lid is roughly 8" so guessing 5"? Definitely not 7" cause then it would only be in about 1/2" from the lid. But gonna have to pull it and measure it. If I have to I'll order the whole thing cause my plastic is cracked a little too but then I'd have to figure out how to get the sticker off the old one...lol
So this is what mine should look like. My element sits inside the lower part of the plastic by at least 1", maybe even 2". Nowhere near as large as the one in the picThis is what my housing looks like > https://www.partsvu.com/arrestor-fl...BYbjCpONUWEZEX74ydW5PXcaw8QrDdfxoCcuUQAvD_BwE
Yeah I'm not big into the K&N's. It's not a race boat. I ran them on my race cars back in the day but not needed on anything I operate now.Many replace their flame arrestor with an aftermarket filter type like K&N, they think their helping. A boat motor doesn't need a filter
I have the same kit but it never makes me feel all warm and fuzzy.2006 Mercruiser 5.7 TKS (turnkey start) in a 2006 Crownline 250CR. I have the manuals and in the past I have always used my Campco winterization kit where you fill the jug with pink then connect your garden hose to the T on the jug and warm the engine off the garden hose. Once warm you flip the T so it sucks the pink out of the jug. I store in an underground mine so it never gets cold enough to freeze but usually bring it home mid March and have got some pretty cold days after coming home.
So I can only find 3 drains on mine. First is down low on the front of the engine on what I guess is the water distribution block? Then IIRC there is one on the bottom of each manifold. None on the water pump that I can feel for. Was thinking this year about just pulling hoses and pouring directly into the hoses cause I'm not 100% confident the t-stat is opening to get pink all through the engine.
The only thing my manual says is to pull the 2 plugs on the sea water pump (mine doesn't have any) and the one of the front bottom of the engine. Then just says to let it drain and leave the plugs out?
Not mentioning outdrive, oil, etc as I'm ok with all that.
Wondering if maybe the blue plugs for the sea water pump got lost along the way and they replaced them with bolts? I can't see in there to see anything but can't feel much there either.
Fwiw, the antifreeze rec from Merc didn't come in until later. '80's instructions has it as optional. My gut is that your corrosion comes from running heated salt water through the block all year, not sitting after it's been flushed with fresh water and drained.That’s what Merc says to do in their shop manual!
Draining is most important but adding corrosion protection over the long haul is a great idea I’ve done it for close to 20 years