T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1284.1 | | DEMOS1::GOUGHP | Pete Gough @REO 830-6603 | Mon Jul 17 1989 09:07 | 5 |
| Check the impeller and also the water inlet filter. Failing that
ring 0243-371151 (Savages at Emsworth).
Pete
|
1284.2 | Belt tension? | ISLNDS::BAHLIN | | Mon Jul 17 1989 11:30 | 2 |
| Check belt tension too.....
|
1284.3 | Any more? | LASHAM::JORDAN | Chris Jordan, London Region AC, UK | Mon Jul 17 1989 13:09 | 3 |
| Thanks for the ideas... keep them coming... and I will check the
boat next weekend.
|
1284.4 | More things to check. | RAIN::WHITCOMB | | Mon Jul 17 1989 21:07 | 21 |
| Just a few things to check:
Is the thermostat the correct one for the motor?
Have you tried running without a thermostat?
Have you over heated the engine to the point where
the water boils and deposits salt in the water
passages?
Is this a new condition? What did you do to the
motor before this condition appeared?
Is the prop fouled by fishing nets or rope?
Correct fuel?
Hope some of this will help you...
John W.
|
1284.5 | check water in cylinder | HAEXLI::PMAIER | | Tue Jul 18 1989 06:14 | 19 |
| this is a known problem for Volvo diesels.
The cooling inside the cylinder gets clogged with deposits from the
water.(assuming you have fresh water cooling)
It is very easy to check.When the engine is running,open the valve
at the base of the cylinder and check if water is flowing freely.
This valve is used to drain the cylinder during lay up (freezing).
If the holes between the cylinder head and the cylinder are clogged,
you will see only a dribble (sp?).
I was running my engine for more then 1000 hours with completly
closed cooling.During winterlayup I tried to drain the cylinders
and could not get any water out of the cylinders.I removed one cylinder-
head and found the problem.Because I have no alarm,I have not found out
earlier.
When I called Volvo Penta: Yeah,you should have...... blabla bla
Peter
|
1284.6 | full story | HAEXLI::PMAIER | | Wed Jul 19 1989 06:59 | 68 |
| Hi John, here is the full story.
My engine has a temparatur display (white green red).When the engine was new,
the temp was just at the beginning of the green zone.After 200 hours running,
I noticed the temp going up for a short time (1 minute),but still well below
the red zone.This happend every 3-5 minutes.
I noticed at the same time a higher oil consumption.But nothing out of spec.
I also noticed steam leaving the exhaust.I changed the thermostat twice.
Then I got the tip that the small hole in the termostat is to
small.I made it bigger and most problems went away for another 200 hours.
Then it started again.Oil consumption was nil during the first 50 hours after
oilchange and then went up rapidly.So I checked every 4 hours.
My boat is in the water during the winter.To make shure,the engine is not
freezing during my absence,I always drain the water from the cylinders.
I noticed that one cylinder had only a little water in it.And the next time
even less.And one day there was no water.
When I bought the boat,I got a boat with a frozen engine.Volvo Penta did not
accept it as warranty and the yard told me it was my fault.But thats an other
story.I had to change all 3 cylinderheadgasket after 1 hour runtime.
Since then,I was never shure if I mounted the gaskets the right way around.
Thats how it works:
Engines are made for different purposes and different ratings,but are using the
same mechanical parts.You can have Volvo Penta engines for recreational or
professional work.They have different temperature and revolutions.The temparatur
is "adjusted" with different headgaskets.There are more holes in the cylinder
for cooling water then actually used.
My engine has one cooling hole covered with the gasket.When I installed the new
gaskets,at the last moment I found out,that I have put the gasket the wrong
way around on the last cylinder and closed some of the cooling holes.Now I had
a problem.Should I check the other two cylinders as well or take chances ?
(gaskets are expensive and can only be used once).I took the chance.
Now I had this temparatur problem on my hands and I did not know if the gaskets
have been mounted the right way around.With a heavy heart I opened the first
cylinder and got the shock of my life.The gasket was ok,but all cooling holes
completly closed with a white "stone".(Cylinder and cylinderhead)
I gave it to the local garage to clean it,but they gave up and have send
it to the nr.1 company which does all this valveguides honing,brakes overhaules
etc.
I have done the exhaust concentrator (sp?) myself with vinegar and houshold
lime remover .I installed a heat exchanger and the engine has been running
now for more then 500 hours with a steady temparatur display and no problems.
A few weeks later after the sucessful repair of my engine,I told my story
a mechanic doing occasionaly repairs to Volvo Pentas.He told me,this
is a known problem and normaly ends with the engine burnt out due to no
oil.Then the engine gets replaced and the owner gets the information,he
did not check the oil level regulary.
I had to replace several time the sensor for the oilpressure.The switch
inside the black plastic got damaged from the execive heat from the engine
block.
I do not know what the "white" stone is.I operate my boat in salt and fresh
water.Does saltwater contain lime ? My engine has 1800 hours total,ca 1200
in saltwater,the rest in a lake with a very low lime concentration.
If you have the same problem as I had,I would try vinegar (leave it in the
engine for a week or two and see what happens.I'm not shure,but I believe
you can see the deposits if you open the thermostat housing and shine a light
inside the first cylinderhead.
Peter
|
1284.7 | | RAIN::WHITCOMB | | Fri Jul 21 1989 02:05 | 45 |
| Peter, thank you for sharing your experience. Mine, I hope won"t
be similar but...here's what has happened so far.
Last weekend we finally ventured out into Long Island Sound for
the first time. Our previous experience had been short trips of
several hours on the Connecticut river, sometimes under sail but
mostly under power. During this time the motor acted normally with
temp at 180 degrees and oil pressure at 40 lbs.
However, out on the sound the temp steadily climbed over 180 and
approached 200. I checked the oil, water supply and exhaust water.
All seemed normal but we slowed to approx half speed and continued.
The temp dropped some and we continued on our trip. At Plum Gut
near the tip of Long Island, we needed full power because of the
tidal conditions and the temp soared to 230.
We slowed again but this time the needle stayed "pinned". As we
were in a relatively safe area by this time we shut her down.
When she cooled I checked the water inlet...plenty of water, the
impeller...looked ok and water flowed fine there, removed the
thermostat...no blockage there. All hoses and tubes were clear,
but a 3/8 inch cast iron elbow that supplys water to the water jacket
was plugged with a grainey black material similar to carbon.
After cleaning this out the engine ran fine and because I never
replaced the thermostat the temp never got above 150 degrees. Of
course, similar to your experience my oil pressure sending unit
doesn't work anymore. The next day she ran for another five or
six hours with no problem.
My questions are as follows...
What do I look for for damage from this?
Can I use a radiator/block flush to clean
out any more of this stuff that may be waiting to block things
up again?
The stuff I have in mind has oxolic acid
in it...has anyone out there done this before?
By the way, my engine is a 16 year old Volvo MD2B with raw water
cooling.
Thanks again, John W.
|
1284.8 | | CHEFS::GOUGHP | Pete Gough @REO 830-6603 | Fri Jul 21 1989 04:08 | 14 |
| Best to flush with with the approved solution from Volvo, the solution,
whose name I have forgotton, is the one used to flush the system
prior to winterisation. If you experiment you could end up with
an expensive repair job. I had a wander through my Volvo course
notes and promptly left them at home..... but a another short term
fix without chemical.........is to put a freshwater hose on the
inlet side whilst hand cranking the engine. never tried it and it
sounds painful.........maybe the expense of chemical is not to bad
after all.........
Pete
|
1284.9 | | RAIN::WHITCOMB | | Mon Jul 24 1989 13:42 | 13 |
| Well, the weekend is over and after installing a new thermostat
(an expensive Volvo thermostat,I might add) the engine ran fine
and never exceeded 140 degrees F. That is aprox what 58 degrees
C. works out to but I still would feel better if I flushed her
out. The 58 degrees was stamped into the valve of thermostat.
In any event, Pete would you look up the "approved" Volvo solution
or better yet send me a copy of your Volvo course notes. Some
_thing like that would be invaluble to me. I'm at the Enfield
(ENO) facility.
Thank You, John W.
|
1284.10 | All OK now | LASHAM::JORDAN | Chris Jordan, London Technology Group, UK | Mon Jul 31 1989 12:25 | 17 |
| Well, the week is over, and basically the engine ran fine....
But before that my brother-in-law took about an hour working on
the engine, and produced a hollow copper pipe about 5 inches long,
1/2 inch in diameter, with a hole in the side about half way along.
We enlarged the hole to the size of the dents in the metal, cleaned
out the gunge and carbon and deposits from the inside, and then
put the tube back (breaking the end!! - but that is another story).
After that the water circulated around the engine correctly, and
it didn't over heat.....
Thanks for all your help,
Chris
|
1284.11 | MD17C heat issue | DPDMAI::CLEVELAND | Grounded on The Rock | Wed Dec 29 1993 14:57 | 26 |
| Well, it's clearly time to revive this note:
I've got a Volvo MD-17C engine. 3-Cylinder, 35hp, raw water cooling.
I was running it this weekend after doing some general work and noticed
that after 15-20 minutes that when I touched the various cylinders,
front, middle, back, I noticed that I could hold my hand on the front
valve cover top and it was barely warm, the middle one was warmer
(mildly uncomfortable to hold onto for very long), but the rear one was
blistering hot! I opened the side drain valve of the rear cylinder to
see if water would come out. I only opened it enough to allow it to
come out slowly, so I don't really know the flow rate on it. Water did
come out and it was scalding hot.
My temp gauge reads normal, right where it has always read.
The engine does burn some oil.
Is this temp variation between cylinders normal? I don't recall this
being the case in the past but am unsure. Am I about to experience a
major problem here? Is this something I should be concerned about?
Is there something I should be doing to fix it- if so, what?
All ideas and suggestions would really be appreciated.
Thanks,
Robert
|
1284.12 | Water | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed Dec 29 1993 15:00 | 6 |
| The blistering hot cylinder doesn't sound normal to me. The variation
in temp. sounds too extreme to me. I would be suspicious of a partial
water blockage into the 2nd and 3rd cylinders. Was this engine used in
salt water? Can you 'revere flush' the block?
Jeff
|
1284.13 | Was in salt water | DPDMAI::CLEVELAND | Grounded on The Rock | Wed Dec 29 1993 15:05 | 8 |
| The boat was used in salt water for 12 years. We just brought it up
into fresh water earlier this year. I don't know of a way to reverse
flush the block as the water inlet goes from the top front of the
engine (thermostat location) to top rear of engine (exhaust head) and
tilts back about 15-20 degrees. I'd be afraid to dis-engage the exhast
pipe and shove a water hose up it to blow water out the front for fear
of filling a cylinder with water or some other equally distasteful and
disasterously bad event.
|
1284.14 | probably not good news ..... | MASTR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed Dec 29 1993 15:15 | 20 |
| re .11:
At a guess, there is a blockage in the water cooling passages and the
very hot cylinder is dangerously overheating (you could well be burning
oil in this cylinder or have damaged cylinder walls and/or piston
rings).
The salt in seawater forms scale when the water temperature exceeds some
value well below 212 deg F. This scale is an excellent insulator. After
12 years in salt water you quite likely have significant internal
corrosion and scale. I don't think flushing the block will help much.
I'd discuss this situation with a competent Volve mechanic. I'd also be
prepared to buy a new engine or pay a very large repair bill.
Nigel Calder's book on diesel engine repair is a good reference.
Happy New Year?
Alan
|
1284.15 | injector ? | HAEXLI::PMAIER | | Thu Dec 30 1993 08:21 | 64 |
| Hi Robert,
dont worry about your engine. A Volvo is an engine which smokes,
oils, smells, ratles, vibrates and sometimes overheates. But: it seldom
breaks completly down and as long as it has engine oil, it will not destroy
itself. But watch out, the longterm reliability is at risk with your
overheated cylinder. The rubber rings around the valve stems may get
hard and may leak oil in the long run. That is exactly what happend to
my engine.
This is my opinion of your problem if Murphy is not at work:
1 cylinder gets hot, 1 is warm, 1 is cold , burns engine oil
Cooling system ok. The hot water from the hot cylinder hits the
thermostat, thermostat opens up, distribution of cold water is bigger
than it should be, cools down the "good" cylinders to a temperatur below
normal. The engine thermometer will show a normal reading, as the
cooling water has the right temperatur mix:
1 too hot + 1 warm + 1 cold = normal temperatur/ reading ok
Only Murphy could block one cylinder and not the others. When my MD17D cooling
was blocked, all 3 cylinder had the same problem and that gave the strange
reading at the thermometer.(pulsating reading)
Ok, good so far. Your cooling system is ok. The problem lies most probably
with that particular cylinder.
What could be wrong in a cylinder:
Injector, valves, piston and pistonrings
How to check each of this:
Valves: feeler guide. no problem
Injector: This is the most probable cause.
An injector is a part which has to be maintained from time
to time. Cost: the replacable part costs 50$ in Switzerland
The holder has not to be replaced, only the "nozzle". The spring
inside the injector gets tired and has to be adjusted every
few hundred hours running time. (Volvo Penta seems to have a
problem here, a proper engine should go for decades)
Piston check compression
Conclusion: no problem, pull the injectors and you are all set.
Engine oil gets burned by the overheated cylinder.
If Murphy has hit you:
leaking cylinderhead gasket: almost impossible in a marine diesel.
The high pressure inside the engine will blow a damaged gasket to
pieces. The engine would run very rough and possibly water in the
engine oil.
Worst case scenario: damaged valve/piston/pistonring. Unlikly,
not enough running time on the engine. Can easely be diagnosed with
compression check. I assume you have less then 10000 hrs on your engine.
Injector pump: unlikly, if no water enters the pump, no problem during the
life of the engine.
Peter
|
1284.16 | Normal? | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Dec 30 1993 11:20 | 13 |
| So Peter, if I interpret what your saying correctly.... its 'normal'
for his engine to be running with one HOT cylinder, or, at the least
its tolerable?
I don't know of any engine in which its normal for the cylinders to run
at major differences in temperature.
It sounds to me as if scaling/rust/corrosion has limited the water flow
through the water jacket of the hot cylinder and its just a matter of
time until he has major ring damage and cylinder wall scoring in that
cylinder, unless its already happened.
Jeff
|
1284.17 | | MASTR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Thu Dec 30 1993 13:00 | 33 |
| I'm not so sanguine as Peter about your engine. The temperature
differences you describe between the cylinders sounds quite abnormal
and definitely cause for concern, even alarm. I would assume that at
some places all the cooling water goes through one passage (eg, past the
thermostat). At other places the water must have parallel paths. It
wouldn't work very well to have series flow of water past the cylinders
since you would get very uneven cooling. This would imply that it would
be possible for one blockage or restriction to keep cooling water from
one cylinder and not the others.
If a fuel injector is clogged, the engine will likely idle very roughly
since the cylinder with the clogged injector won't be firing. If an
injector is stuck open, the engine will likely run roughly, but only for
a short time until the fuel washes enough lubricating oil from the
cylinder wall to cause piston seizure.
No fuel water separator is 100% effective, so there will always be some
water to cause corrosion in the injectors and injector pump. (I've
discussed my injector pump problems in another note. After some 1200
hours over 12 years, our injection pump needed major repairs because of
corrosion, and we have two water separators in series in our fuel
system.)
A compression test may detect valve, piston, and piston ring problems.
But because of the very high cylinder pressures, a rather expensive tool
is needed to make the test. As I vaguely recall, the compression tester
used by the mechanic who diagnosed our Westerbeke cost over $1000.
I'd get professional help, and I'd certainly not ignore the problem. It
isn't likely to fix itself. Sigh. But better to find the problem now
than during the sailing season.
Alan
|
1284.18 | | HAEXLI::PMAIER | | Fri Dec 31 1993 08:36 | 58 |
|
oooh, my english needs some upgrade....
What I tried to say:
The uneven heating is of concern and has to be repaired.
But I would not be to much worried, without checking the most
obvious things like compression, injector and valve clearing.
Its like checking a powersupply on a malfunctioning computer.
I know, we prefer to swapp the CPU module first.......
Injector do not clogg open or closed. Injector do leak, have wrong
opening pressure due to tired springs and have burnt out spray holes not
producing an even spray pattern.
If the engine is blocked inside , then a total rebuild of the
engine is in place. There are two 8 mm holes leading the water from
the cylinder to the cylinderhead. This get easily blocked from
the chalk in lakes. It happend to me twice (MD2B and MD17D). But then all 3
cylinders get blocked at the same time and then you have a different
problem. The amount of water available to cool the engine is limited
to the water in the housing of the thermostat. The thermostat opens
like a explosion and lets in cold water and closes immediatly again.
This creates a strange reading on the thermometer. Below temp slowly
rising just above normal and very fast sinking back below normal.
Thats a clogged cooling system. Robert does not have this.
So I did recommand to do the most basic work in such a case:
measure the compression and check the injectors. There is a 90% chance
that the injector needs servicing. Any other fault would need a partial
rebuild of engine. (or, how do you change a burnt out valve without
opening up the engine ? )
Alan, you are correct on checking the compression. Cars have different
size of injectors and the adapters do not match. It has to be done by
a professional. But I do not agree on injectors. Injectors need regular
service. Also in trucks and cars. I also do not agree with the injector
pump. If you get water into the pump, the engine stops working. The pumps
have no rings, nothing, just unbelievable exact pistons. If any water
enters the pump and creates rust, (15 minutes is all it needs), then
its gone. I have it from a reliable source, that under normal
conditions the injector pump needs no replacement ever except in case of
waterdamage. Robert did not say that he has any problems in starting
the engine. So his pump should be ok.
Now, I'm going back to read-only mode. I will be busy rebuilding MY engine,
starting tomorrow. During my atlantic crossing, the heatexchanger broke
off and the engine overheated to such an extend, that the paint was
starting to burn. Thats how I found out about it. The smoke .....
Now, I have some spare time to replace all gaskets, check all valves and
check the injectors. (by the way, the engine did run for more then 1000
hours after the "near burn out").
Happy New Year to all of you.
Peter
|
1284.19 | partial fix | DPDMAI::CLEVELAND | Grounded on The Rock | Wed Jan 12 1994 12:00 | 39 |
| Well, I've found part of my problem.
I started at the bottom and worked my way up. The first item I found
was that my water pump impeller was missing 1.5 blades with another one
smashed flat. Fortunately, I found all the pieces.
I replaced the impeller, started the engine and again observed the temp
variation. After one hour of pumping very cold lake water into the
engine (raw water cooled) I began to again notice a difference in temps
between heads. Now the front (closest to the thermostat and the middle
are running without any discernable difference in temps. The head
furthest back on the engine is running much cooler now, but still feels
about 20-40 degrees warmer than the rest.
Right now, I am assuming I may have had two or more immediate problems:
1. Lower water flow either created the problem or has now notified me
of a potential slight cooling system blockage problem that may be in
the process of forming.
2. I may have had an air pocket trapped in my cylinder head from when I
last drained it and closed the cylinder head petcock before allowing it
to refill completely with water.
I still am feeling uncomfortable about the difference in the last
cylinder. Since I haven't had the injectors looked at since I've owned
the boat (nearly 4 years) and I doubt that the previous owner did
(based on other poor maint habits I've discovered), I may pull them and
have them serviced. I was not aware that they would go out of
"alignment". But, before I do this, I have a question, should I pull
the injectors and have them serviced if I'm not blowing any black
smoke or could it be hidden by the blue smoke? Is this a normal annual
maintenance item??? I ask because if my temp difference could be caused
by diesel dribble out of a now weakened injector, I want to have this
fixed. If it could still be a slight flow restriction then I don't want
to add to the fix cost by pulling the injectors unless this is prudent
maintenance. Finally, should I pull the manifold off and attempt repair
if I now have the difference down to this point?
All thoughts are welcome!
|
1284.20 | when all else fails, do the obvious | MASTR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed Jan 12 1994 12:43 | 17 |
| re .19:
Ah, another lesson in "do not overlook the obvious"! I wonder why none
of us "experts" suggested checking the pump impeller. Clearly, the right
first step.
Well, I'm told that injectors do clog with algae, the springs do get
tired, and the nozzles do wear from the high pressure fuel forced
through them. It was not terribly expensive to have our injectors
cleaned and recalibrated -- on the order of $40 each a few years ago. It
certainly wouldn't hurt to have them looked at. Peter may (will)
disagree with me, but it might be well to have the injection pump
cleaned and checked, too. Our engine started more easily and seemed to
use less fuel after an injection pump overhaul. Maybe Volvos are
different than English-built Westerbeke's (insert smile here).
Alan
|
1284.21 | | MOVIES::WIDDOWSON | OpenVMS engineering, Ecosse | Thu Jan 13 1994 02:06 | 8 |
| I know little about sailing and equally little about diesels, but I
used to know a bit about debugging.... Why not swap the injectors between
cylinders and see whether the heating moves with the injectors or stays
with the cylinders ?
Of course getting injectors reconditioned is not a bad idea for PM but
as a diesel (car) owner I always wait until I've got emission or
economy problems before so doing....
|
1284.22 | | ESPO01::NEALE | Who can, do - who can't, consult | Thu Jan 13 1994 04:15 | 9 |
| I worked for a keen sailor once who economised so much on all other areas of his
life to support his hobby that when someone diagnosed old tired spark plugs on
his car as the cause of rough running, he bought one new plug and tried it in
each of the four cylinders until he found the "bad" one...
But I have to admit that at $40 a throw for three injectors, I would look to
localising the problem a little more :-)
- Brian (who is glad he has a single cylinder diesel)
|
1284.23 | | MASTR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Thu Jan 13 1994 09:27 | 18 |
| re .21:
In theory, I agree. Reality is a little different. On my engine, at
least, every removal of an injector means some bleeding of the fuel system,
which is both time consuming and messy. More importantly, perhaps, the
pressures in the fuel lines to the injectors are very high. The joint at
the injector is, on our engine, made by compressing the convex spherical
end fitting (non-replaceable) on the fuel line into the concave
spherical mating surface on the injector. After not very many
tightenings/loosenings the fuel line fitting distorts and getting a
leak-free seal becomes difficult. I've had to replace one fuel line and
the others should be replaced -- $25 to $50 per line or more. And our
engine has four cylinders.
On an engine as old as the one in question, it makes sense to me to have
the injectors overhauled and know that they are all good.
Alan
|