Detective needed Overheating one side only?
#12
My bet is in the elbow, possibly right near the end.
#14
Thread Starter
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Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 62
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From: Austin, Texas
Well the mechanic tried everything and they were never able to recreate the extreme overheat condition.
They were still seeing a 20-30 degree difference at the manifold, when measured with a laser temp gauge.
They ran it on muffs and for an extended period on the lake. WOT, stop-n-go, stop-n-heat soak.
They reversed the output from the thermostat housing and the temperature increase switched sides as well. They then ran a test using clear tubing and saw very few bubbles and the temp increase still followed the left side output at the T-stat.
Waterflow out of the thru-hull exhaust is equal on both sides.
They backflushed
They re-checked the impeller, t-stat housing, elbows, risers, gaskets.
Changed out the 160 degree t-stat for a 140 degree....that helped a little on both sides.
They even called Mercury Marine; who indicated that it was not uncommon for some motors to run up to 30 degrees hotter on one side or the other.
They were still seeing a 20-30 degree difference at the manifold, when measured with a laser temp gauge.
They ran it on muffs and for an extended period on the lake. WOT, stop-n-go, stop-n-heat soak.
They reversed the output from the thermostat housing and the temperature increase switched sides as well. They then ran a test using clear tubing and saw very few bubbles and the temp increase still followed the left side output at the T-stat.
Waterflow out of the thru-hull exhaust is equal on both sides.
They backflushed
They re-checked the impeller, t-stat housing, elbows, risers, gaskets.
Changed out the 160 degree t-stat for a 140 degree....that helped a little on both sides.
They even called Mercury Marine; who indicated that it was not uncommon for some motors to run up to 30 degrees hotter on one side or the other.
#18
Thread Starter
Registered
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 62
Likes: 0
From: Austin, Texas
Ran it myself this morning. Ran strong right up to the rev-limiter. No strange sounds or smells.
Air temp was 85 degrees.
Water temp was 85.
At idle in the slip it ran up to 170 degrees and was hotter on the left than the right.
At 3,000 RPM it comes up to 175 degrees on the gauge
At WOT 4,680 RPM for 15 minutes...it came up to 190 degrees on the gauge.
When I slowed back to 3,000 RPM it came back to 180 degrees immediately.
The left side is much hotter than the right side in all conditions.
I ran the RPM's up to 2,500 while out of gear; looked under the swimplatform and the water flow appeared equal from both exhausts.
I am considering adding an oil temp gauge as an added layer of protection. Where should the sender be placed? is it 1/8", 1/4" or 3/8"? I would have to replace the stock dash panel to add the gauge or I could just remove the non-functional depth gauge....never use it anyway; I just mind the markers & stay on the deep side.
Air temp was 85 degrees.
Water temp was 85.
At idle in the slip it ran up to 170 degrees and was hotter on the left than the right.
At 3,000 RPM it comes up to 175 degrees on the gauge
At WOT 4,680 RPM for 15 minutes...it came up to 190 degrees on the gauge.
When I slowed back to 3,000 RPM it came back to 180 degrees immediately.
The left side is much hotter than the right side in all conditions.
I ran the RPM's up to 2,500 while out of gear; looked under the swimplatform and the water flow appeared equal from both exhausts.
I am considering adding an oil temp gauge as an added layer of protection. Where should the sender be placed? is it 1/8", 1/4" or 3/8"? I would have to replace the stock dash panel to add the gauge or I could just remove the non-functional depth gauge....never use it anyway; I just mind the markers & stay on the deep side.




