T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
100.1 | Gimball berring maintenance question | NETMAN::BAER | Garry Baer | Fri Aug 05 1988 14:44 | 15 |
|
Being a re-entrant (after many o/b years) back into the I/O world
I was wondering, Do most I/O owners remove/have their outdrive's removed
EVERY YEAR (as specified) to check & grease the gimball berring?? Back
10 years ago (my last I/O) I used to remove it every 3rd season just because
I was setup to perform maintenance (had a chainfall and related special tools)
I never had any problems with the driveshaft berings fo the 5 years I owned
the boat.
My 5.7L (OMC) manual state's that EVERY YEAR this operation should
be performed. What is the consenous of the NETboaters...
Cheers
Garry
|
100.2 | help - new boater ! | SIGANA::DCARR | | Fri Aug 05 1988 15:27 | 15 |
| Hi,
I hope some of you experienced boaters can help me out. I bought
a 17 ft Stingray with a 130 hp I/O Mercruiser a few weeks ago.
The skiing has been great, but I've got to start thinking about
maintenance ! The dealer said to bring it back after 30 hours for
service. He said it would cost around $100. Can anyone tell me
what they do ? Can I do it myself. I have the same question for
winterization. Is it really that big a deal ? I hate to have to
bring it to a dealer unless absolutly necessary. Should I order
the manuals (and if so where can I get them)?
I'd appreciate any input you can give.
Denise
|
100.3 | Yeah I do it | TOOK::SWEET | Capt Codfish...Looking for Mr. Tuna | Fri Aug 05 1988 15:36 | 7 |
| I have taken my 230 mercruiser to stoneham boat center the last
2 years (engine is an 86) and had them do the winterizing and
pull and store the lower unit. So far no problems so I guess it
works. Seems like cheap insurance to have a ready to go engine
come spring.
Bruce
|
100.4 | I've done it myself so far | HJUXB::BIANCO | | Fri Aug 05 1988 16:54 | 20 |
|
I do the winterization myself, so far anyway. I ordered the manuals
for my OMC I/O and they have step by step instructions of what
needs to be done. I did mine last year and had no problems at all.
My dealer gets $150 for winterization.
The only thing that may be beyond the scope of us DIYers, is the
removal of the drive to check the alignment. A special tool is
required and adjustments are made by via the motor mounts. I didn't
do mine last year because mid-season the dealer had it off to check
something else. But this year I'm not quite sure what I'm going
to do yet. A friend of mine had this alignment tool made up at
a machine shop. OMC calls for shaft alignment every season. Not
sure about Merc, but my guess is they probably also require it.
Parts manual as well as service and operators manual are priceless.
Bob
|
100.5 | Gimbal Bearing | SEDJAR::MALCOLM | | Mon Aug 15 1988 16:23 | 20 |
| <<< VICKI::CVG$DATA0:[NOTES$LIBRARY]BOATS.NOTE;1 >>>
-< PowerBoats >-
================================================================================
Note 100.5 I/O Maintenance 5 of 5
SEDJAR::MALCOLM 10 lines 15-AUG-1988 15:19
-< Gimbal Bearings >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RE: .1
I would recommend doing the gimbal bearing every year. I had the
dealer winterize my 7.5 Liter OMC King Cobra last fall. Servicing
the gimbal bearing was not part of their normal winterization. The gimbal
bearing was just replaced July 31. Love that 4Winns 3 year warranty
:^). The boat is an 87, and had approximatly 225 hours at the time.
If you use the boat less, it may not be necessary every year.
I know I'll have mine done at least once a year from now on.
Scott
|
100.6 | 4Winns Warranty | SALEM::WENTWORTH | | Fri Aug 26 1988 14:10 | 7 |
|
RE: .5
When you speak of a 3 year 4winns warranty on 87 boats do you mean
just the OMC powered products ? A friend had a problem with the
U-joints going bad first time he used the boat this spring. A total
of about 40 hours on the 185 hp Mercruiser (V6), dealer says tough
luck, $300 bucks.
|
100.7 | 3 years for all! | GORT::MALCOLM | | Fri Aug 26 1988 14:52 | 9 |
| RE: .6
Did he have it winterized? As far as I know, 4 winns covers both
Omc and Merc with the extended warranty. At least last year when
I bought mine, both the Omc and Merc were the same price with the
3 year warranty. Maybe the dealer was playing games? Was it a 4Winns
dealer? Was it where he bought the boat?
Scott
|
100.8 | 4Winns warranty | SALEM::WENTWORTH | | Fri Aug 26 1988 16:43 | 7 |
|
RE: .6
Yes it was winterized by the selling dealer.
Yes it is a 4Winns dealer.
Yes it was the selling dealer he brought it to.
Yes I suspect the dealer is playing games.
|
100.9 | Starter/Alt rebuilder reccomendation | NETMAN::BAER | Garry Baer | Thu Sep 08 1988 17:43 | 44 |
| My friend had such good luck dealing with these people he asked me
to post this message to the net. Hope it saves someone's "transom"!
Rebuilders of Starters and Alternators
--------------------------------------
Automotive Components of New England
120 Central St. (Rear of Bldg.)
P.O. Box 484
Hudson, Ma. 01749
(Two minutes from 495 heading east on 62)
Prop. Wallace A. Howard Jr.
Automotive Components of New England, Inc. is in the business of rebuilding
starters, solenoids, generators and alternators for land and marine use.
They do this on a mass production basis.
HOWEVER...
I called these guys looking for an inexpensive way to get my boat up and
running; my starter had failed. They told me to bring it down anytime, and
they'd check it out. I brought it down THAT DAY. They tested it, it was
busted. I left it there. They had it rebuilt by 4:00 THE NEXT DAY. My
boat was up and running without missing a day of fun in the sun. (It rained
the two days the boat was down.)
That all happened in May. In July, I had starter problems again. I took
the starter back, and the guys rebuilt it again with no questions asked.
They told me why it had failed again, and instead of rebuilding it to the
manufacturers' specs the second time, THEY MADE IT BETTER - At no charge !
The second failure was not the result of their work. I have had no more
starter problems, and expect none ever again on that boat.
They were also extremely helpful in suggesting troubleshooting techniques in
diagnosing the cause and ways to prevent the thing from failing any more.
In this day and age where you can't trust most of the people who perform
maintenance and services to keep their Customer's best interest in mind,
these guys stand out as Superior in keeping a happy customer a happy customer.
I highly recommend this outfit to any do it yourself mechanic who can get
him/her self to the point of finding the defective component, and knows
that a good rebuilt part is as good, of not better than, a new one.
|
100.10 | | SMAUG::LINDQUIST | | Fri Sep 09 1988 08:40 | 7 |
| Chelmsford Auto Electric also rebuilds marine starters,
alternators, etc. They rebuilt my starter in June in
less than twenty-four hours, and no problems so far...
I was glad to find them as a new starter was $300+
- Lee
|
100.11 | Rebuilding in N.H. | ATSE::URBAN | | Fri Sep 09 1988 14:01 | 6 |
| DECO Electric, Rt 102, Hudson, N.H.
They have rebuilt starters and OMC tilt motors for me, including
motors for '60's vintage OMC Sterndrives. They even helped me get
a new tilt-motor direct from Prestolite, $80 vs. $200+ from OMC.
Good people, fair prices, quality work.
|
100.12 | Clunking OMC drives | MUSKIE::LEFEBVRE | | Wed Aug 30 1989 17:41 | 9 |
| If any of you have an OMC I/O from 86'-88' you may need to hav aq
new shift dog and foreward gear installed. There is a known problem
and you will hear a clunk when under load, such as pulling skiers
with many people in the boat. OMC is fixing this under warranty,
even on my 87' boat. As long as it is in, I had them lube the gimbal
bearing and I will do the winterizing myself.
Rob.
|
100.13 | problems? no. She's got opportunities. | MTADMS::CARLETON | TGIF: Thank God It Floats | Mon May 14 1990 11:50 | 27 |
|
Well, I guess you can't get a boat 'summerized' without *some* kind
of problem. I'ld like some advice, anyone have any ???? :-)
Power: T/190 Mercruisers I/O, freshwater cooled,
less than 400 hrs.
problem: 1 power tilt piston decides it only wants to work
one way. Is it better to replace with a new one or (possibly) rebuid
the old? Any idea how much a new one would cost?
problem: Just started the motors for the first time this
year. One started to overheat so I shut it down. I plan on replacing
the thermostat this weekend but am wondering about other possible
causes. Last year this motor warmed up faster and ran a little hotter
(well within acceptable limits) than its mate. If the thermostat
isn't the problem, any ideas for diagnosing the problem without
rebuilding the cooling system??
I'm mechanically inclined but lack in experience, special tools,
and funds. Not missing too much, eh? :-)
Any help or info you can give would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Don
|
100.14 | I'd betcha its in the pick-up pump. | ULTRA::BURGESS | Mad man across the water | Mon May 14 1990 12:52 | 43 |
| re <<< Note 100.13 by MTADMS::CARLETON "TGIF: Thank God It Floats" >>>
> -< problems? no. She's got opportunities. >-
> problem: Just started the motors for the first time this
> year. One started to overheat so I shut it down. I plan on replacing
> the thermostat this weekend but am wondering about other possible
> causes. Last year this motor warmed up faster and ran a little hotter
> (well within acceptable limits) than its mate. If the thermostat
> isn't the problem, any ideas for diagnosing the problem without
> rebuilding the cooling system??
Check with the "ear_muffs" first, I assume this boat is out of
the water (???), if no water comes out then you're not picking any up.
This usually indicates trouble in the pick-up pump in the lower unit,
when was the impellor last replaced ? It should be done each year,
every two years max. If you've never done this yourself,,,,, well,
its not too bad, but getting the shift mechanism all lined up can be a
bit tricky, no special tools beyond a socket set (mostly 5/8) and
Allen keys (3/8 especially). It seems that thermostats usually fail
toward the stuck open position, so things tend to warm up slower
and/or run cooler.
> I'm mechanically inclined but lack in experience, special tools,
> and funds. Not missing too much, eh? :-)
Right, (-:
No "special" special tools needed, but if you have some wire a
little thinner than a bicycle spoke (MUCH thinner than coat hanger
wire) it will be useful for aligning that shift mechanism. It needs
to be stiff enough to guide things together but thin enough to allow
assembly up to the last 1/16 inch or so, then you sneak it out and
tighten up the nuts and bolts. This isn't very clear, but it will be
once you have it apart and realize which little bit keeps flopping to
one side every time you try to reassemble it. Despite what the manual
says, I've found it easier to assemble it with the shift lever and the
lower unit in "Forward", also with the lower unit close to max tilt
(shallow water, not the trailer position).
Good luck, call if you need to talk it through.
Reg
|
100.15 | Also check the exhaust manifolds | STAFF::CHACE | is it getting warmer? | Mon May 14 1990 13:50 | 17 |
|
re.13
Is the boat nrmally used in salt water? If so, then in addition
to the things described in .14, you may want to check the exhaust
manifolds. The raw water which cools the engine's water within
the heat exchangers may not be able to circulate due to corrosion
build-up in the exhaust manifolds. The raw water gets picked up in the
outdrive, delivered to the heat-exchanger (where it cools the water
that is part of the closed system) then the raw water goes out through
the exhaust manifolds. If they are plugged, the raw water won't
circulate even if ALL other components in the cooling system are
ok. Result = overheating engine. Sometimes only one manifold is
plugged. A way to check for this is to feel the exhaust pipes just
after the exhaust manifolds. If one is much warmer than the other,
then *that* exhaust manifold is plugged.
Kenny
|
100.16 | Mussel power | ROBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Mon May 14 1990 15:44 | 4 |
| I've recently read of an increase in the occurrence of mussels growing
in the water intakes. Something else to think about.
Art
|
100.17 | Mercruiser Shift Problems | DSTEG1::WENTWORTH | | Mon May 14 1990 16:07 | 6 |
| My '79 Mercruiser 470 doesn't shift into forward or reverse. The cable
that runs into the stern drive will not move over it's full travel.
My suspicion is that the shifter shaft is bound up in the neutral
position. Has anybody played around with this area ? I have the
factory repair manuals and they make it sound straight forward but
sometimes they lie.
|
100.18 | 2 years max ??? | VICKI::DODIER | Food for thought makes me hungry | Wed May 16 1990 14:06 | 7 |
| re:14
Is 2 years the maximum life expectancy for an impeller or is that
just for this particular make and model of engine ? This sounds like a
pretty short life.
Ray
|
100.19 | Preventative measures, etc.... | ULTRA::BURGESS | Mad man across the water | Wed May 16 1990 14:25 | 26 |
| re <<< Note 100.18 by VICKI::DODIER "Food for thought makes me hungry" >>>
> -< 2 years max ??? >-
> re:14
> Is 2 years the maximum life expectancy for an impeller or is that
> just for this particular make and model of engine ? This sounds like a
> pretty short life.
Its a "recommendation" Its cheap insurance.
"Changing the oil is cheaper than changing the engine."
That kind of reasoning.
B'leeve me; once you've got it apart to check it, its worth
the small amount of extra effort and a few $s to replace it. It may
well be that they last 10 or 20 years for some people under SOME
conditions, dunno, its just not the kind of thing I would wait to
fail.
Reg
{We can discuss tire mileage too...... but I don't want to see
the steel belts (-:, (-: }
|
100.20 | Remove that thang | SWAPIT::SCHMUHL | toys R me | Fri May 18 1990 11:49 | 9 |
| The *REAL* reason for replacing the impeller on a regular basis, is so
that the bolts holding the lower unit together are periodically
removed. If you don't move those bolts, and your impeller loses its
shape (they spin in water without moving any), or something worse
happens, it will be difficult/impossible/$$$$$$ to get it apart. Look
around in the junk pile at a boatyard, and see how many outboards and
I/O's are there with the heads rounded and torn up on the lower leg.
...Larry
|
100.21 | 2-bolts and it's done | ALLVAX::ONEILL | | Tue May 22 1990 18:21 | 14 |
|
Granted that impeller replacement is an important part of I/O
maintence, depending on the outdrive, Mercury's impeller is deep
inside the outdrive, requiring the boat to be out of the water and
45 minutes of someone time to change it and $$$ if the dealer does it.
Were as the impeller in the OMC outdrive is in the top portion of the
outdrive, can be done in the water (if you are careful not to drop the
bolts), and take no longer than 10 minutes.
In the future it would be nice to have the impeller located as part of
the engine, instead of being located in the outdrive. 8^)
Mike
|
100.22 | not so HOT now .... | MTADMS::CARLETON | TGIF: Thank God It Floats | Wed May 23 1990 11:41 | 16 |
|
Update on .13
It was the impeller. It was well chewed and needed
replacing. :-( ..... but I gained some experience. :-) Thanks
for all the help. All she needs now is a name and I can't use what
I was callin' her last week .............
Weather permitting, she'll be launched this weekend.
I've been waiting for this since Oct. and I'm starting to get anxious.
Know what I mean???? :-)
latuh,
Don
|
100.23 | Volvo and Yamaha ALREADY have it inside the boat! | STAFF::CHACE | is it getting warmer? | Wed May 23 1990 13:22 | 6 |
|
Both Volvo and Yamaha have their *RAW* water impellers mounted on
the front of the engine. - there is no impeller in the outdrive
at all. Very easy to change <5min with one screwdriver/wrench.
Kenny
|
100.24 | Grease Ftting Stripped out of I/O Outdrive Block | BRWSKI::RESKER | | Wed May 30 1990 11:34 | 22 |
| I've got a Mercruiser I/O. There are several grease fittings on the outdrive.
I was greasing one of these fittings. When I went to pull the gun off the
fitting I pulled the fitting out of the outdrive block. The threads in the
in block were stripped. The fitting (which did not get stripped) will not
screw back into the block.
What do I do?
Retap the the grease fitting hole to a larger size grease fitting?
This is bumming me out. I want to put this sucker in the water but must resolve
this problem first.
One other thing. When I ran the engine with the muffs, I could hear a slight
knocking coming from the outdrive (not the engine). What is this? Is it
serious? I changed the outdrive lube and it is full. Could it be the impeller?
thanks,
tim
|
100.25 | no problem | HYEND::J_BORZUMATO | | Wed May 30 1990 13:03 | 10 |
| As for the grease fitting, retap the hole, then helicoil it.
Aluminum is the louziest place for threads. Its not totally
your fault that it pulled out. The "idiots" who made it
should have done this.
As for the "noise" can't help you.
jim...
|
100.26 | | BRWSKI::RESKER | | Thu May 31 1990 14:19 | 9 |
| Jim,
Thanks for the suggestion. Do they make helicoils sized for grease fitting
holes? How about using an epoxy to glue the damn thing in there and worry
about retapping the next time I regrease?
thanks,
tim
|
100.27 | might as well do it right.. | HYEND::J_BORZUMATO | | Thu May 31 1990 15:05 | 10 |
| You have to tap the hole to fit the helicoil. they come in various
sizes. It cost me $15. to have a roto-tiller head done.
Its not a big job, can you bring the boat to some one that
does it. Evev a local garage, or repair shop??
Jim.
|
100.28 | Use the next larger grease fitting | CSMET2::CHACE | is it getting warmer? | Thu May 31 1990 15:34 | 8 |
|
I beleive grease fittings use pipe threads (tapered) I have never
heard of Heli-coils for pipe threads. Why not just get a grease
fitting with one size larger threads and put that in?
Kenny
|
100.29 | On Helicoil inserts | BTOVT::JPETERS | John Peters, DTN 266-4391 | Mon Jun 04 1990 13:16 | 20 |
| Grease fittings normally are screwed into 1/4-28 NF holes (a straight
thread, not a tapered pipe thread). The threads on the fitting itself
are tapered.
Epoxy won't work on a greasy or oily surface, and is very weak for this
sort of application; a grease gun produces pressures that are probably
in the KPSI range.
An 8-32 helicoil kit just cost me $31 at a local industrial supplier.
Order number for a 1/4-28 kit is 5402-4; it comes with drill, tap, 24
inserts, and insertion tool.
You need to be careful to drill and tap on the same centerline as the
original threads. You will develop metal shavings from drilling and
tapping, and there's a hardened metal tab on the insert which is
usually broken off by driving it into the hole after insertion.
This is sort of a pay-me-now-or-pay-me-later situation.
J
|
100.30 | Helicoils and pipe threads | BTOVT::JPETERS | John Peters, DTN 266-4391 | Mon Jun 04 1990 13:20 | 7 |
| Helicoils are also made for pipe threads.
Heli-Coil Products
Shelter Rock Lane
Danbury
Connecticut 06810
203-743-7651
|
100.31 | I/O vs. Outboard | NEMAIL::COLVIN | | Tue Jun 18 1991 10:59 | 46 |
| I am not sure if this is the right place for this, so please feel free
to move it if the moderator sees fit. I am also sure this comes under
the title of another of those age-old arguments but I would like some
opinions of I/O's versus large outboards.
My father has an 18' MFG (vintage about 1966) with a 65 HP Johnson
(vintage 1973). Both are only used in fresh water (Lake Champlain)
in the Summer and are in quite good condition. The boat is a fairly
heavy early fiberglass runabout and is a good rough-water boat. It
really could use, however, a little more oomph (it is OBC rated for
90 HP) and my father has the idea of possibly putting and 85 or 90 HP
on it. He priced new ones and it appears that in the Burlington, VT
area one would need to part with about $5,000 to $5,400 for a 90 HP
with power trim and all the accessories. There did not seem to be
anything used available in good condition.
My comment to him was that it did not seem wise to put that kind of
$$$$ into a boat that is 25 years old, particularly when a stroll
through the WantAdvertiser yields many used boats in the 18-22 foot
range with 4/6/8 cylinder I/O's in the $5,000-$10,000 price range. Many
of these boats are only a few years old. I/O vs O/B did not seem to
make too much difference since neither really gets removed from the
boat.
His response was that he understands the $$$ argument but that he hears
from friends up there that I/O's are maintenance trouble, that they
need regular seal replacements/rebuilds/tune-ups/alignments/etc. I must
admit that many of the used boats advertised state recent rebuilds of
the engine or outdrive on boats that seem to be quite new. A perusal of
this notes file also seems to show alot of maintenance issues. A friend
bought a 19' Grady White bowrider two years ago (boat was a 6-year old
in excellent condition). I have had to tow him home three times in two
seasons and he has yet to put it in this year since it needs $300 worth
of seals replaced in the outdrive.
I guess I am looking for experience and guidance in the I/O vs O/B
decision (regardless of whether we do something to the current boat).
If money is going to be spent, should I look for a good I/O (which
seems to be my preference for noise, space, and power) or should I look
for a large outboard? Other than the obvious power differences, is
there a reliability/maintenance difference to the different engine
sizes? Is through-the-hull exhaust better or not?
Your inputs are greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Larry
|
100.32 | i/o verses o/b | DCSVAX::HOWELL | | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:19 | 15 |
| Larry,
I have had both i/o and o/b and i find the maintence issue about the
same one must understand that whenever you put a machine as complex as
an ob or io in a marine enviroment you are going to have maintenance
problems.For my own preference i like the convience of the io and the
fuel eccomony is a little better because it is a 4cycle as opposed to
a 2 cycle.You should realy consider how you are going to use the boat
if for example your going to fish in shallow water an ob would be
better for you but if you are going to do alot of water sking and long
ocean trips then an io is better.What i'am saying here their both good
performance machines but don't buy something you don't need.
Hope this is of some help good luck.
Dave R. Howell
|
100.33 | | TOOK::SWIST | Jim Swist LKG2-2/T2 DTN 226-7102 | Tue Jun 18 1991 13:28 | 20 |
| Well this is a question which won't get you a statistically significant
or unbiased answer in this file, so given that...
When I was younger I always puttered around on little boats with small
outboards (<15hp). They were always breaking (of course the fact that
98% of the usage was by 12yr old kids didn't hit me back then). When
I got into getting my own boat I wasn't going to get an outboard, I was
going to get a "real man's motor". But my first two boats have had
outboards not because I wanted them but they happened to be what was
there given price and all the other constraints you go through...
In retrospect I'd have to say I've changed my mind. I've never had a
problem and don't know anyone else who has (but I don't know all that
many boaters). You see larger outboards on some pretty serious
offshore boats. And I have to say that it is also my impression that
I/Os seem to break more often, but then again there are a lot more
things that can go wrong.
Some hard frequency of repair type data would sure help diffuse all the
non-data in discussions like this.
|
100.34 | Mostly Skiing/Cruising | NEMAIL::COLVIN | | Tue Jun 18 1991 16:52 | 28 |
| The boat would not be used for fishing so shallow water operation is
not a problem. The current outboard (65HP Johnson) has been quite
reliable (except for the last two years on the last run of the season
when the ignition quit one year and a shift cable broke the other
year). All the maintenance it seems to require is care with the gas,
and changing the lower-unit grease and checking spark plugs in the
Fall before storage. Both my father and I are quite mechanically
inclined so this is not a problem, the only thing we have had to take
the motor in for repairs was the ignition failure. This is all pretty
simple. Am I getting into alot more with the I/O, specifically things
which will need a professional mechanic to accomplish? We do all the
oil changes/coolant changes, etc on our cars and his truck and have
done carb rebuilds, water pumps, brakes, starter replacements. Is there
normally more maintenance items beyond this sort of skill level?
The previous response probably hit the nail on the head, I/O's are more
complicated and have more to go wrong. Again, however, I am attracted
to the additional power and getting a slightly larger boat (19-22 ft)
with the power for skiing. I understand the added issues of putting
anything mechanical near water, and most of them I can deal with but I
would not like to have to haul the boat over to an expensive mechanic
on a regular basis to accomplish repairs. I was really struck by how
many boats in the WantAdvertiser boast "low hours on new engine/heads/
outdrive" or something which would seem to last alot longer. I know
that some people can be pretty hard on equipment but this still seems
like a high occurrence.
Larry
|
100.35 | i/o or o/b! | WEFXEM::HOWELL | | Tue Jun 18 1991 17:06 | 13 |
| Larry,
I responed earlier and as i said i have had both and after 40yrs. of
boating both for fun and for an income and my personal feeling is
still the same but i have had 4 boats with i/o 3 mercruisers and 1 omc
and i have no repairs an over 1000 hrs of operation except for the
annual service and taking care of items before they get serious the i/o
have preformed to specs.The care and service of all marine equipment is
required not an optional thing you can put off like alot of people do.
In closing you may want to consider this it is awful hard to repair an
ob out in 20 fathem and leaning over the stern then it is to repair an
i/o inside the hull. This is what makes the differnce for me.
Dave
|
100.36 | I go for the 4cycle | MR4DEC::DCADMUS | | Tue Jun 18 1991 18:10 | 31 |
|
I have had I/O, I/B, and Outboards. I love an Inboard as everything
except the prop is insude the Hull, but they are a disadvantage in
shallow water.
For the reasons mentioned previously, I prefer I/O. I would recommend
that if the I/O you select uses a pump mounted in the outdrive-remove
the imopeller and put in an engine driven pump like the volvo has. Pump
replecemnt every 2 yrs seems to be common on the I/O's and higher HP
outboards, and is a pain to replace on both. With an engine driven
Bronze pump,, you can carry a spare impeller, etc, and replace it in
about 10 min from inside the boat.
I have had my problems, but they have been mostly due to poor
faulty repairs by "professionals". Like any piece of complicated
equipment, you cannot skimp on the recommended maintenance.
I love the smooth, quiet running of the I/O, the lack of smoke,
and the fuel economy- especially with higher HP engines. Running at low
speeds is an absolute Joy with a 4 cycle vs two cycle, And maintenece
is straight forward and parts are available (even the "maine" parts for
the engines at yoyr freindly local auto parts store.
OUtboards have the advantage that they are light,relatively simple, and
when your drive train dies, you can simp[ly and easily bolt on a new
one.
That's my 2 cents,
Dick
|
100.37 | | DNEAST::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Wed Jun 19 1991 14:07 | 7 |
| Larry,
I guess I've responded to all the previous discussions so I
might as well join in here as well. It appears to me that you have
already decided on the I/O so why anguish over the choice? The factual
differences are well documented here and elsewhere and the subjective ones
are free for the asking and worth what you pay for them.
Paul
|
100.38 | Just Leaning | NEMAIL::COLVIN | | Thu Jun 20 1991 15:38 | 13 |
| Actually I have not decided, just leaning. My father is actually the
"decider", it is his boat. I was looking for some data for him, and to
try to counter or clarify some of the negative input he has been
getting from some of his friends about I/O's so that he could make the most
informed decision. My family and I use the boat quite a bit for skiing, etc
and I do most of what maintenance there is and do not want to see
either of us buy a headache. I realize that most responses and
experiences ar anecdotal, but that is fine. I appreciate everyone's
taking the time to respond.
Larry
|
100.39 | Trailer Boats had a drive comparison. | SALEM::NORCROSS_W | | Fri Jun 21 1991 09:06 | 34 |
| The May 1991 Trailer Boat Mag has an interesting article comparing an
outboard (225 HP Yamaha), an i/o (Mercruiser 260 HP), and a jet (
Indmar 330HP) mounted to three identical Advantage 20' 5" hull. I can
drop my copy in the mail to you if you promise to return it.
Basically, here are the results:
outboard I/O jet
-------------------------------------------------
0-30 mph 4.48 sec 4.67 4.13
top speed 63.2 mph 55.7 56.4
noise level 78 db 80 db 89 db (cruising speed @ 50')
88 db 82 db 91 db (full throttle @ 50')
weight 397 lbs 907 860
fuel economy 2.6 gph 2.2 3.0 1000 rpm
8.5 10.2 10.4 3000 rpm
14.5 17.0 17.0 4000 rpm
26.3 * * 5600 rpm full throttle
* 25.6 * 4400 rpm full throttle
* * 35.3 4900 rpm full throttle
base price $26K $25K $22K (no options)
Test crew comments:
Basically, the outboard and jet were more fun to drive at high
speeds. The jet was very loud. The I/O would still be the choice
as the best combination for an overall family boat.
You can draw your own conclusions from the data and I can send you my
copy of the mag if you want. They talk more about handling and stuff
like that. Things that can't be quantified.
Too bad they couldn't have thrown an inboard into the test.
Wayne
|
100.40 | shift adjustment necessary? | MIZZEN::DEMERS | | Mon Jul 08 1991 11:17 | 14 |
| Four Winns, OMC outdrive
Lately, when shifting from forward to neutral, I find myself wiggling the
shifter to ensure that it jumps into neutral. This is because sometimes it
doesn't quite disengage and the prop still spins (barely). I can tell that
it is engaged because I'm still moving and the engine sounds different when
it pops out of gear.
Before I make a significant treck to the dealer, is this a simple adjustment
thing or something more complex? My tech manual seems to deal with this only
as part of a larger teardown/rebuild.
/Chris
|
100.42 | left out some important data... | MIZZEN::DEMERS | | Mon Jul 08 1991 12:06 | 5 |
| The boat is a 1991 model. I had checked note 549, but assumed that the
outdrive had been updated. Good assumption? Should I check for a date stamp?
/Chris
|
100.43 | timing lubrication of bearings, etc. | MIZZEN::DEMERS | | Fri Oct 18 1991 11:16 | 12 |
| I know that the lower unit should be lubed, etc. every year and I intend to do
it. Question: Is there any reason why I can't do it BEFORE the beginning of
next season instead on AFTER this season.
I'm assuming that it's a "routine" thing - making sure it get's done every year
and that fall is as good a time as any. My preference is to do engine
maintenance now and lower unit maintenance in the spring.
Any faults to this thinking?
/Chris
|
100.44 | Do it now | GOLF::WILSON | We don't need no stinking decal | Fri Oct 18 1991 12:21 | 15 |
| RE: .43
>> Is there any reason why I can't do it BEFORE the beginning of
>> next season instead on AFTER this season.
There sure is. If there's any moisture or water in there, you want to
get it out NOW, rather than let it work all winter at rusting your lower
unit. If there's enough water, it can actually split the lower unit when
it freezes and expands.
This holds true for wheel bearings as well. Good enough reason to do
it now?
Rick
|
100.45 | got it... | MIZZEN::DEMERS | | Fri Oct 18 1991 14:50 | 6 |
| Hmmm - didn't think of that.
I'm on it - thanks Rick!
/Chris
|
100.46 | Don't wait till spring. It cost me $$$ | MASTR::FRENCH | Bill French ZKO3-3/X8 381-1859 | Fri Oct 18 1991 14:55 | 5 |
| I junked an outboard cause I waited till spring. Everything in the
lower unit was a mass of rust. The dealer termed it "negligence".
Bill
|
100.47 | Lube the drive shaft | KENNY::CHESTER | | Mon Oct 21 1991 16:06 | 9 |
| One other reason is to lube the splined shaft on the top of outdrive.
If there is water in the end of the shaft coupling (inside the fylwheel
housing) there is a very good chance the shaft will rust to the
coupling. The fix is cutting the shaft with a tourch and removing the
engine to replace the flywheel and coupling.
Save money do it now.
Ken
|
100.48 | your ans. to replacing the oil! | DCSVAX::HOWELL | | Thu Oct 24 1991 16:58 | 3 |
| The reason you should change the lube oil in i/o is that if you have
had any water get threw the seals it will freeze and destroy your i/o
for a nice round figure of $2000 replacement cost.
|
100.49 | I/O whining problem | GOLF::WILSON | | Fri Oct 25 1991 13:51 | 23 |
| Moved by moderator (this seems like as good a place as any...)
================================================================================
Note 925.0 Out Drive Whine Problem No replies
RIPPLE::ARROWSMIT_GA 17 lines 24-OCT-1991 19:46
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I've got a Larson with a 260 Mercruser outdrive. I've had
a water leak ever since the boat was new, however, my fear of
maintenance shops ($$$) kept me from taking the boat in. The leak
finally got bad enough that I dug out the shop manuals to learn
how the exhaust manifolds attach to the transom. I found that the
dealer didn't tighten the lower 12 point 3/8" exhaust manifold bolts.
Problem is that after tearing it all apart (out drive off to check
source of leak as well as skeg repair) the out drive "whines" more
than it used to at high RPM and load, I can reduce the whine by raising
out drive slightly at cruse speed which I beleive indicates the" U"
joint is misaligned and whining.
Could I have misaligned the U joint in my efforts? What stops the out
drive in the fully down poisition? could it have moved? Is it the
hydrolic lift's or a mechanical stop? I wonder if the motor
shifted its alignment?
|
100.50 | Operating Tilted I/O | NEMAIL::COLVIN | | Tue Jun 23 1992 12:02 | 12 |
| I am not sure if this is the right place for this but my question
regards operating an I/O with the drive tilted. We have to traverse
some shallow water getting into the dock on a lake. Is it OK to operate
the I/O (260 Mercruiser) with the drive tilted as long as the water
intakes are covered or is this damaging to engine/drive? It is a
relatively short distance (probably 30 yards) and short time (less than
1 minute) but it requires that the drive be tilted up at least
half-way on the tilt gauge. Looking at the boat with the drive tilted
FULLY up while stopped, the intakes are still 8-10 inches under water.
Hope you veterans can give a new I/O owner your input. Thanks.
Larry
|
100.51 | don't see a problem.. | PIPPER::BORZUMATO | | Tue Jun 23 1992 14:09 | 10 |
|
I don't see any problem with the intakes 8-10" underwater.
The only issue is the angle of the prop, it won't give much
of a push.
I wouldn't be concerned..
JIm.
|
100.52 | Take it easy.... | LEVERS::SWEET | | Tue Jun 23 1992 16:50 | 4 |
| I might be concerned about the amount of angle put in the U-joint.
Keep to low rpm's.
Bruce
|
100.53 | Low RPM | NEMAIL::COLVIN | | Tue Jun 23 1992 17:24 | 7 |
| RPM's are indeed very low and actually this is usually calm water and
mostly used to give just enough of a push to cross this shallow water.
Most of the time it is actually in neutral with just enough engagement
of neutral and reverse to maneuver up to the dock. Throttle is always
just at idle. You're right, Jim, the handling is pretty sluggish.
Larry
|
100.54 | low when high ? | BTOVT::BELL | Infinity gets tedious before its over | Wed Jun 24 1992 21:25 | 14 |
|
2nd the emotion on the low rpm's in tilt
my OMC 4.3L manual sez that once you leave the trim range
and are in TILT, operation not to exceed 1000 RPM is ok
as long as water is being pumped through the engine.
After 1000 you risk drivetrain damage
your rpm range may differ for the Merc but I won't argue
when they say they didn't design it to work at a severe tilt.
fwiw
- Ed
|
100.55 | Noise = $$ | SUBSYS::CHESTER | | Fri Jun 26 1992 10:23 | 8 |
| If you can help it don't. The joint is a unversal joint not a constant
volocity one. The bearing have very high loads when the drive is
tilted. You can tell when the bearings are going. They will make a
knocking noise at low speed in gear and the drive full port or
starboard.
Ken C
|
100.56 | Keep that i/o low! | DCSVAX::HOWELL | | Mon Jun 29 1992 08:35 | 7 |
| On tilting a mercruiser up the trim control should be used while the
engine is running as this won't let you put it up to high and the
factory rule is when it is up to the limit don't run the engine above
1200rpm's as the universal joint in the i/o will be damaged.The only
i/o that you don't have to wory about is omc cobra which has a special
designed universal but you still have to keep it in the water deep
enought for water pickup.
|
100.57 | Clunking '77 OMC Outdrive | GUCCI::HERB | Al is the *first* name | Tue Jun 15 1993 11:49 | 21 |
| Note 100.12 I/O Maintenance
12 of 56
MUSKIE::LEFEBVRE 9 lines
30-AUG-1989 16:41
-< Clunking OMC drives >-
qqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqqq
If any of you have an OMC I/O from 86'-88' you may need to hav aq new
shift dog and foreward gear installed. There is a known problem and
you will hear a clunk when under load, such as pulling skiers with many
people in the boat. OMC is fixing this under warranty, even on my 87'
boat. As long as it is in, I had them lube the gimbal bearing and I
will do the winterizing myself.
******
I have a '77 OMC Outdrive that "clunks" and appears to slip if I
throttle above 3300 rpm. I just had a new hub put in the prop thinking
that was the problem. Shifting seems ok.
Anyone have a hint as towhat this can be?
|
100.58 | Mercruiser Outdrive Removal? | SOLVIT::PHELPS | | Mon Mar 20 1995 16:01 | 14 |
| Has anyone ever attempted to remove their trim limit switches on their
Mercruiser I/O? I have a 1988 which now I am told by the service folks
that are the "old " style with screws that make disassembly and
assembly of the switch mechanism a snap. The problem is the contact is
a piece of flat, copper across opposing contact points and they are
both corroded, so contact is minimal to none. The new limit and
position switches come as pairs and the wire for each is embedded in
the switch housing, so consequently, the outdrive has to come off.
Beautiful! Just wondering if anyone has ever taken the outdrive off
themselves.
Regards,
John
|