T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
530.1 | Let's be smart about dumping Anti-freeze | SALEM::TAYLOR_M | Passing Lane Addict | Thu Oct 05 1989 22:06 | 10 |
| Lou, I've been thinking about non-toxic antifreeze for mine. I went
last year with a dry engine, but really prefer to know that theres
no water pockets sitting in there un-protected.
RV dealers sell non-toxic antifreeze, and it's no more expensive
than Ethelyne Glycol. But the kicker is, how compatible is the
non-toxic anti-freeze with engines and such? They use the stuff
for plumbing in RVs and in closed-down summer camps plumbing.
Mike
|
530.2 | I'll go to re-using it; just don't call me Reggie recycle | ULTRA::BURGESS | | Fri Oct 06 1989 09:43 | 26 |
| re <<< Note 530.1 by SALEM::TAYLOR_M "Passing Lane Addict" >>>
> I went
> last year with a dry engine, but really prefer to know that theres
> no water pockets sitting in there un-protected.
Now that we've started to get light frosts (Wot fall weather ?)
I've been opening the block drain and removing the vent plug from the
thermostat housing every time I take the boat out of the water, i.e.
while its still hot. I figure that the thermostat is open, so there
shouldn't be any air locks to keep water in there. Taking out the vent
plug and the trailer ride home should get all but a couple of drops
out. I've done this the last couple of years, until I just COULDN'T
use the boat any more in fact, I suspect that I could get away with
leaving the block dry all winter.
I think I'll try saving the anti freeze next spring, I fill
through a tube on the block's drain cock anyway (bottom up, same as
the final drive), it would be no more trouble to use a longer tube
that I can route out of the bilge drain in the spring to recover the
(now expensive) glycol. I admit to not having bothered before, it was
hardly worth it for cost savings, but I'll take the trouble for a
cleaner environment.
R
|
530.3 | use the non-toxic stuff | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Fri Oct 06 1989 09:57 | 6 |
| The non-toxic antifreeze for drinking water systems should be (and is claimed
to be) compatible with all the materials in an engine cooling system. After
all, drinking water systems contain rubber, plastic, brass, and other metal
parts. I've used non-toxic antifreeze on the sea water side for my engine's
cooling system (as recommended by the builder, in fact) for 10 years with no
problems at all.
|
530.4 | How about this? | PACKER::GIBSON | Have SCUBA, Will Travel, Dtn 225-5193 | Fri Oct 06 1989 11:23 | 20 |
| Geeze! Don't run the engine without cooling water! The pump impeller
will disintigrate before your very eyes. Not to mention the hot spots
that will be formed in the heads & manifolds due to lack of proper
cooling. Not such a problem if the engine is FWC, but you will still be
replacing sencondary coolent pump impellers.
re: How do you recover the glycol once you pour it into the exuast
manifolds? Start the engine (with raw water cooling of course) and the
glycol blows out the exuast. It seems like one would have to drain the
whole system from its lowest point.
Reg. You really muck up your bilge with glygol? what a bitch to clean!
I would think that denatured alcohol would work just fine
and it costs less. Only thing is the fish might get drunk when it dumps
into the water. Hummm? Maybe we can use Bacardi to winterize the
drinking water system?
Walt
|
530.5 | The fill tube becomes the drain tube, right ? | ULTRA::BURGESS | Plywood product platform performance person (P5) | Fri Oct 06 1989 11:39 | 38 |
| re <<< Note 530.4 by PACKER::GIBSON "Have SCUBA, Will Travel, Dtn 225-5193" >>>
-< How about this? >-
> Geeze! Don't run the engine without cooling water! The pump impeller
> will disintigrate before your very eyes. Not to mention the hot spots
> that will be formed in the heads & manifolds due to lack of proper
> cooling. Not such a problem if the engine is FWC, but you will still be
> replacing sencondary coolent pump impellers.
I wasn't planning to run anything dry, just said I leave it
dry between launchings when there's a frost.
> re: How do you recover the glycol once you pour it into the exuast
> manifolds? Start the engine (with raw water cooling of course) and the
> glycol blows out the exuast. It seems like one would have to drain the
> whole system from its lowest point.
Dunno, but I'm assuming that what goes up will come down.
Like I said, I fill from the block drain cock with a tube and funnel,
holding the funnel above the highest point of the engine. When
anti-freeze comes out the thermostat housing vent I put the vent plug
back in and hang the tube/funnel assembly on the side of the engine
with some coat hanger wire.
> Reg. You really muck up your bilge with glygol? what a bitch to clean!
Nope, I was saying that I will route the tube out of the boat
via the bilge drain. I will then put the end of it into a 2 gallon
jug (which my "assistant" will hold patiently (-: ) and I'll open up
the drain cock to recover it all. I'll probably use the non toxic
stuff this year anyway.
Reg
{What am I talking about ? this damned boat is s'posed to get
itself SOLD this fall so I can get a NUUUuuuu wun !}
|
530.6 | | SETH::WHYNOT | | Fri Oct 06 1989 11:57 | 10 |
| Last year my block (350 Chev) and manifolds took about 3 gals of
50/50 mix of prestone/water. In the spring I recovered about 2.5
gals which is still cooling my truck. The other .5 gal ended up
on my neighbors stockade fence, out the exhaust, when I fired up
the engine (with garden hose, of course). How is prestone as a wood
preservative?? ;^) ;^) (it must be friday)
Doug...I might go the non-toxic route this year also, but I'm also
concerned about rust inhibitors/lubricants that non-toxic antifreeze
probably doesn't have. More comments please??
|
530.7 | THEY STORE EM DRY | TALLIS::LOKEN | | Fri Oct 06 1989 15:07 | 23 |
| Lou, thanks for continueing our lunchtime discussion from yesterday
here in the notesfile. As Lou mentioned in .0, I was up talking to the
local yard mechanic last weekend inquiring about facilities to
winterize my boat. He seemed confused when I asked for a hose and water
to connect up the flushing ears while I fog the engine. To my
amazement, he said they drain the blocks, start the engines, fog, close
engine for the winter. Under cross examination he did not waiver on the
method being used by the majority of yard owners on Winnipesaukee. I
did notice the paint around the thermostat housings had not been
disturbed and new gaskets had not been installed (i.e. antifreeze not
poured in through the thermostat) confirming the engines were probably
stored dry last year. I would proably have to also believe they fogged
the engine without supplying water to the raw water pickups (quicker
than removing all those nasty drain plugs).
Has anyone else run into this type of practice before. I can't believe
you can do this too many times before destroying the implellers.
Alan, thanks for the tip on the non-toxic antifreeze. I still share the
concern of .10 on the lubricants and rust preventatives but I believe
it to be the best alternative to date.
Harlan
|
530.8 | Take a call, make a call... | ULTRA::BURGESS | Plywood product platform performance person (P5) | Fri Oct 06 1989 15:35 | 10 |
| re <<< Note 530.7 by TALLIS::LOKEN >>>
> Has anyone else run into this type of practice before. I can't believe
> you can do this too many times before destroying the implellers.
A line from an old comic song....
"It all makes work, for the working man to do"
R
|
530.9 | | SQPUFF::HASKELL | | Fri Oct 06 1989 16:41 | 20 |
| I was told by the previous owner of my boat that all I had to do
to winterize the engine was to start the engine (with the boat on
jack stands), attach a short length of hose to a fitting on the
water intake line, wait for the engine to reach 180 degrees, stick
the hose in a bucket of 2 gal of antifreeze. Let the engine suck
this up and while doing this, fog the carb.
I did, it worked great. After the antifreeze was sucked up, I shut
off the engine, removed the plugs and squirted a mixture of wd-40
and mistery oil into the cylinders and then cranked the engine over
3 or 4 times. Then replaced the plugs. No problems.
The metal beast started right up in the spring on the first try
and I then repeated the process with 2 gal of fresh water to flush
out.
I also poured antifreeze into the bilge and sponged it out in the
spring. No problem.
Paul
|
530.10 | Glug | BTOVT::WOOSTER_C | | Mon Oct 09 1989 13:43 | 3 |
| Hey Lou, I thought you used bourbon for antifreeze....
8-} John Peters, not Mr. W.
|
530.11 | It ain't that hard! | WJO::SCHLEGEL | | Mon Oct 09 1989 14:12 | 25 |
| Hey Guys:
Why does everyone make so much work out of winterizing? Re-circulate
your anti-freeze. Which way you do it depends upon your particular
engine, of course. Many,many years ago, I had a twin engine Chris and
spent light-years trying to opewn every damn drain plug on the two
engines. I think there were about six on each engine, and dawd awful
to reach. Also, they were usually plugged, anyway. One year, I saw
the Chris-Craft people do it, and was amazed at the simplicity. For
the big inboards, they add a length of hose to the intake water lines
and down into a 55 gallon drum. They fire up the engine, and as soon
as anti-freeze spits out, move the 55 gallon drum under the exhaust.
Nowadays, with my little sailboat engine, I put 2 gallons in a bucket,
stick the intake hose into the bucket, and re-direct the exhaust hose
into the same bucket. Whenever there is a warm day during the Winter,
I fire up the engine until she comes up to temperature, then shut it
down, without losing any anti-freeze. A side benefit is that I do not
even have to fog the engine, asince it operates all year round!
In each case, your circumstances are a little different, but all
engines can use the same approach. This year, my engine was Winterized
in ten minutes. Periodically, I add a little pure antifreeze to
maintain the 50/50 ratio. If you haven't, try it, you'll like the
results!
|
530.12 | aunty-sneeze.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | I'm not. | Tue Oct 10 1989 13:54 | 4 |
| Non-toxic anti-freeze is on sale at Spag's this week. $2.49/gal,
I think.
...tom
|
530.13 | I could have bought an outboard! | PACKER::GIBSON | Have SCUBA, Will Travel, Dtn 225-5193 | Thu Oct 19 1989 16:21 | 16 |
| Just went to Spag's to get some Non- Toxic Anti Freeze during lunch.
Its $3.99 a Gal. No big deal, Bliss has it for less, but with the boat
being pulled out tommorow and nippy weather like last night, I want to
get it winterized.
BTW If you go to Spags don't ask for Potable Antifreeze, I had to spend
10 mins explaining what it was to the fellow in plumbing dept. My fault
I guess? Who would ever think to look in plumbing for it? I found it
over in Automotive next to the Preston Glygol.
Now if I can find a garden sprayer for my Slimy Grimy, Hummmm? I looked
in the cookies/cake dept. Thats where they said it was????
P.S. Don't forget to winterize any livewells and washdown systems!
Walt
|
530.14 | attention Spag's shoppers! | TEKVAX::KOPEC | I'm not. | Fri Oct 20 1989 09:43 | 6 |
| Spag's has two kinds of non-toxic antifreeze; the red stuff and
the blue stuff. I think the blue stuff has very little heat tolerance,
while the red stuff can be heated without losing its goodness. The
red stuff costs more than the blue stuff.
...tom
|
530.15 | | TOOK::SWIST | Jim Swist LKG2-2/T2 DTN 226-7102 | Fri Oct 20 1989 13:19 | 2 |
| there a source for this stuff closer to Boston?
|
530.16 | PRETY COMMON | TYCOBB::J_BORZUMATO | | Fri Oct 20 1989 14:41 | 10 |
| MOST MARINA'S, ALMOST ANY MARINE SUPPLIER, RECREATIONAL VEHICLE
DEALER, MOST HARDWARE STORES, SOME DEPARTMENT STORES.
THIS STUFF IS COMMONLY SOLD AND USED WIDLEY. $3.99 IS ABOUT THE
GOING PRICE PER GALLON.
HOPE THIS HELPS,
JIM.
|
530.17 | Milking the public | ROGER::GAUDET | Ski Nautique | Mon Oct 23 1989 13:24 | 11 |
| The stuff Spag's carries is made by Sudbury and has the "Rule" logo on
it (yup, the bilge pump people). As Tom said (.- a few) they have the
blue stuff (protects to -50F) for $2.49/gal. and the red stuff
(protects to -60F) for $3.99/gal. Thing is that you don't dilute this
stuff...you run it straight (no 50/50 mix).
Kinda funny how the prices almost coincide...2 X $3.99 = $7.98, just
about what you pay for one gallon of Prestone. Hmm, makes you think
about why the price of ethylene glycol went up so dramatically!
...Roger... whose_boat_is_full_of_the_hazardous_stuff_this_year
|
530.18 | Question | PARITY::MITCHELL | Rob Mitchell Data Center Mgr | Tue Oct 24 1989 13:34 | 4 |
| How do you get all of the water out of a lower unit of an outboard
other that letting it drain out or evaporate?
Rob.
|
530.19 | Fix the problem first | NRADM::WILSON | A man's place is on his boat | Tue Oct 24 1989 14:22 | 22 |
|
Rob,
Rather than concentrate on "how to get all the water out", I
would be more concerned with "how did it get in?". At worst
you should have maybe slight traces of condensation. If you've
got signs of actual water in there then you've got a problem
that needs some attention.
Possible sources for leaks include the prop shaft, drive shaft
and shift linkage o-rings, drain/filler plug gaskets and cracks
in the housing.
Once you get the leak repaired, short of disassembling the unit
I only know of one way to get water out. Refill it with fresh
oil, run it for a short time and change the oil again. It may
take a few changes to get rid of all traces of water.
I suppose you could also try a water dispersing agent like WD-40,
but you should only turn the unit over by hand for a while and
then drain and refill with gear oil again before running it.
Rick W.
|
530.20 | Query for Info | PARITY::MITCHELL | Rob Mitchell Data Center Mgr | Fri Oct 27 1989 13:38 | 6 |
| I don't have a leak, I just want to make sure that I don't have any
water in the outboard before winter comes. I flushed the motor not
long ago, and I want to make sute that's there's no water left anywhere
that might freeze.
Rob.
|
530.21 | let it hang | TYCOBB::J_BORZUMATO | | Fri Oct 27 1989 14:16 | 5 |
| RE:20 Rob, just leave it hang on the back of your boat, don't
prop it up or on a motor stand, gravity will take care of the rest.
Jim.
|
530.22 | | ARCHER::SUTER | Gentlemen, start your *marine* engines! | Fri Oct 27 1989 15:43 | 5 |
|
Also don't forget to change the lower unit lube, as
leaky seals and such can allow water into the L.U.
Rick
|
530.23 | Thanks | PARITY::MITCHELL | Rob Mitchell Data Center Mgr | Tue Oct 31 1989 12:29 | 3 |
| Re: to .21 & .22. Thanks, I did both.
Rob
|
530.24 | I'll take mine pickled, please. | KAHALA::SUTER | Never too Hot! | Mon Apr 24 1995 15:06 | 17 |
|
Seems there has always been the ongoing debate between
some boaters of:
"Winterize Wet or winterize Dry?"....
I've always been of the school that goes wet, and keeps antifreeze
in the hibernating boat motor. One argument, I've heard for this school is
that any water that remains trapped in the engine may get diluted enough by
the antifreeze to avoid any engine damage.
This very argument would have saved a fellow noter this year....
my condolences...
Rick
|
530.25 | | BIRDIE::WHYNOT | Malibu Skier | Mon Apr 24 1995 16:14 | 10 |
| I've never had any problems with the pickling method. The recovered
mix is back in the prestone bottles for reuse in other vehicles...
As well as the protection from freezing, the impellor and hoses remain
lubricated and gives the block corrosion protection.
Care to share the details of the unlucky fellow noter? My condolences
also. :^(
Doug
|
530.26 | Frostbitten Malibu | MSDOA::SCHMIDT | | Tue Apr 25 1995 12:37 | 16 |
| Folks,
I think Rick is talking about me. My Malibu Sunsetter with 454 lost a
freeze plub this winter from residual water in the block. I drained the
block with the petcocks, drove it up and down hill to slosh the
remaining water out as Indmar recommends, but appear to have some
damage.
The jury is still out on what the injury is, may be as bad as a
cracked block. I'm in the middle of diagnosis now with the limited time
Digital allows me at home.
I think I'd recommend the antifreeze route from now on. Maybe the RV
type or that new Sierra brand that are less toxic.
Chuck
|
530.27 | watch your drips | GLDOA::POMEROY | | Wed Apr 26 1995 02:52 | 5 |
| According to what I've read if you use regular anti-freeze you may be
in for a big fine if any get into the water. The DNR is supposedly
really cracking down here in Michigan.
Dennis
|
530.28 | Environ-mentally responsible... | BIRDIE::WHYNOT | Malibu Skier | Wed Apr 26 1995 13:03 | 9 |
| Re:-1 Exactly...
To clarify, after I drain/recover the antifreeze from the block,
exhaust manifold, and hoses, The boat is run up in the yard while on
the trailer. What (very) little may be left in the system ends up on the
ground (further diluted by the garden-hose water coming out the
exhaust) and not in the lake. Besides, gotta make sure the things gonna
run *before* I get to the lake. :^)
Doug
|
530.29 | Rust or not? | KAHALA::SUTER | and now for something you'll really like! | Mon Dec 18 1995 14:20 | 5 |
|
Has enyone ever decided if the "pink stuff" antifreeze
contains any sort of corrosion protection?
Rick
|