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#1
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a
bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. |
#2
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
"T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. Pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. |
#3
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. Pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Hey thanks for that answer. I am looking for suggestions on freeing the motor and inspection. Not your stupid opinion asshole. Rebuilding it is the very last option for me. |
#4
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
"T-Rav" wrote in message ups.com... ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. Pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Hey thanks for that answer. I am looking for suggestions on freeing the motor and inspection. Not your stupid opinion asshole. Rebuilding it is the very last option for me. So you'd rather 'jury rig' it and subsequently jeopardize the lives of your passengers by operating substandard equipment. These are your loved ones, that trust you. Obviously you don't care about human life, but they may disagree. Real smart. I don't appreciate your attitude. You still need to pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Calling me names changes nothing asshole. Next time expend a little effort to winterize your equipment. |
#5
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message ups.com... ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. Pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Hey thanks for that answer. I am looking for suggestions on freeing the motor and inspection. Not your stupid opinion asshole. Rebuilding it is the very last option for me. So you'd rather 'jury rig' it and subsequently jeopardize the lives of your passengers by operating substandard equipment. These are your loved ones, that trust you. Obviously you don't care about human life, but they may disagree. Real smart. I don't appreciate your attitude. You still need to pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Calling me names changes nothing asshole. Next time expend a little effort to winterize your equipment. If you would have read the rest of my post, you would see I bought the boat with the problem and that the motor was out. Please don't offer your worthless help to people. |
#6
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
"T-Rav" wrote in message ups.com... ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message ups.com... ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. Pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Hey thanks for that answer. I am looking for suggestions on freeing the motor and inspection. Not your stupid opinion asshole. Rebuilding it is the very last option for me. So you'd rather 'jury rig' it and subsequently jeopardize the lives of your passengers by operating substandard equipment. These are your loved ones, that trust you. Obviously you don't care about human life, but they may disagree. Real smart. I don't appreciate your attitude. You still need to pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Calling me names changes nothing asshole. Next time expend a little effort to winterize your equipment. If you would have read the rest of my post, you would see I bought the boat with the problem and that the motor was out. Please don't offer your worthless help to people. Just go ahead and jury rig it. Make sure you go out alone so WHEN the motor fails there's no loss. |
#7
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
Well, you may not like ee's opinion, but that's probably where you will end
up (although you could do it yourself instead of sending it out). This happened to me once, although not in exactly the same way it did to you. What's almost certainly going on is that the water in the cylinders has caused the piston rings to rust to the cylinder walls. The iron oxide freezes the pistons tight in the cylinders, and it's a real bitch to free them up unless you have machine shop resources. The way I freed things up was to take the cylinder head off and fill up the cylinders above the pistons with penetrating oil (I used Kroil, but Marvel Mystery Oil would be just as good). Take off the pan and the rod caps. It's easiest if you remove the crankshaft, but it's still possible without. Let the oil soak in for a long time. Alternatively drive the pistons up and down with a medium-sized hand sledge. On the top use a block of hard wood like oak to cushion the blows. From the underside, you can use a long hardwood dowel, maybe an inch or more in diameter, pushed up from underneath until it contacts the inside of the piston. If you don't take the crankshaft out, you'll have to start from below until you can drive the pistons up away from the journals on the crank. Eventually you'll get the pistons free, and if you're lucky you won't damage them. After you get the pistons out, you can break out the rings, and the pistons will clean up fine with a wire wheel. But now you're probably looking at some serious pitting in the cylinders. If the pits aren't too deep, the block can be overbored to get to a good surface, but you'll need oversize rings and maybe oversize pistons too. The best possible outcome would be if honing the cylinders got rid of the rust without leaving pits. But it probably won't happen. Basically this is a rebuild. In a machine shop this kind of thing is a lot easier because the machinist can tear the whole block down and then use a hydraulic press to get the pistons out. You'll spend days at it. Sorry 'bout that. Tom Dacon "T-Rav" wrote in message ups.com... ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. Pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Hey thanks for that answer. I am looking for suggestions on freeing the motor and inspection. Not your stupid opinion asshole. Rebuilding it is the very last option for me. |
#8
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
Tom Dacon wrote: Well, you may not like ee's opinion, but that's probably where you will end up (although you could do it yourself instead of sending it out). This happened to me once, although not in exactly the same way it did to you. What's almost certainly going on is that the water in the cylinders has caused the piston rings to rust to the cylinder walls. The iron oxide freezes the pistons tight in the cylinders, and it's a real bitch to free them up unless you have machine shop resources. The way I freed things up was to take the cylinder head off and fill up the cylinders above the pistons with penetrating oil (I used Kroil, but Marvel Mystery Oil would be just as good). Take off the pan and the rod caps. It's easiest if you remove the crankshaft, but it's still possible without. Let the oil soak in for a long time. Alternatively drive the pistons up and down with a medium-sized hand sledge. On the top use a block of hard wood like oak to cushion the blows. From the underside, you can use a long hardwood dowel, maybe an inch or more in diameter, pushed up from underneath until it contacts the inside of the piston. If you don't take the crankshaft out, you'll have to start from below until you can drive the pistons up away from the journals on the crank. Eventually you'll get the pistons free, and if you're lucky you won't damage them. After you get the pistons out, you can break out the rings, and the pistons will clean up fine with a wire wheel. But now you're probably looking at some serious pitting in the cylinders. If the pits aren't too deep, the block can be overbored to get to a good surface, but you'll need oversize rings and maybe oversize pistons too. The best possible outcome would be if honing the cylinders got rid of the rust without leaving pits. But it probably won't happen. Basically this is a rebuild. In a machine shop this kind of thing is a lot easier because the machinist can tear the whole block down and then use a hydraulic press to get the pistons out. You'll spend days at it. Sorry 'bout that. Tom Dacon "T-Rav" wrote in message ups.com... ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. Pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Hey thanks for that answer. I am looking for suggestions on freeing the motor and inspection. Not your stupid opinion asshole. Rebuilding it is the very last option for me. Hey Tom, thank you so much for the suggestion. Any suggestion on the bearings? What to look for. Thanks |
#9
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
On rereading you original post, I see that you said it was the distributor
mount that took the water (I misread it as carburetor, for some reason, and may have jumped to a conclusion). So the cylinder business might not apply, and it might be easier than I thought. I don't know your engine, but if you can expose the geartrain that drives the distributor, you might find that the damage is limited to that area. If the distributor is at the front of the engine, the timing gear cover may expose it. If the distributor drives off the camshaft, which it usually does, you will probably have rust on the camshaft down in the camshaft bushings - that'd freeze the camshaft - and might have to pull it and do some work on it. Then just look 'downhill' for wherever the water wants to run to see where else it might have gotten to. Good luck. Tom "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Tom Dacon wrote: Well, you may not like ee's opinion, but that's probably where you will end up (although you could do it yourself instead of sending it out). This happened to me once, although not in exactly the same way it did to you. What's almost certainly going on is that the water in the cylinders has caused the piston rings to rust to the cylinder walls. The iron oxide freezes the pistons tight in the cylinders, and it's a real bitch to free them up unless you have machine shop resources. The way I freed things up was to take the cylinder head off and fill up the cylinders above the pistons with penetrating oil (I used Kroil, but Marvel Mystery Oil would be just as good). Take off the pan and the rod caps. It's easiest if you remove the crankshaft, but it's still possible without. Let the oil soak in for a long time. Alternatively drive the pistons up and down with a medium-sized hand sledge. On the top use a block of hard wood like oak to cushion the blows. From the underside, you can use a long hardwood dowel, maybe an inch or more in diameter, pushed up from underneath until it contacts the inside of the piston. If you don't take the crankshaft out, you'll have to start from below until you can drive the pistons up away from the journals on the crank. Eventually you'll get the pistons free, and if you're lucky you won't damage them. After you get the pistons out, you can break out the rings, and the pistons will clean up fine with a wire wheel. But now you're probably looking at some serious pitting in the cylinders. If the pits aren't too deep, the block can be overbored to get to a good surface, but you'll need oversize rings and maybe oversize pistons too. The best possible outcome would be if honing the cylinders got rid of the rust without leaving pits. But it probably won't happen. Basically this is a rebuild. In a machine shop this kind of thing is a lot easier because the machinist can tear the whole block down and then use a hydraulic press to get the pistons out. You'll spend days at it. Sorry 'bout that. Tom Dacon "T-Rav" wrote in message ups.com... ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. Pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Hey thanks for that answer. I am looking for suggestions on freeing the motor and inspection. Not your stupid opinion asshole. Rebuilding it is the very last option for me. Hey Tom, thank you so much for the suggestion. Any suggestion on the bearings? What to look for. Thanks |
#10
posted to rec.boats.building
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350 V8 penta engine full of water after winter (Won't move)
Tom Dacon wrote: On rereading you original post, I see that you said it was the distributor mount that took the water (I misread it as carburetor, for some reason, and may have jumped to a conclusion). So the cylinder business might not apply, and it might be easier than I thought. I don't know your engine, but if you can expose the geartrain that drives the distributor, you might find that the damage is limited to that area. If the distributor is at the front of the engine, the timing gear cover may expose it. If the distributor drives off the camshaft, which it usually does, you will probably have rust on the camshaft down in the camshaft bushings - that'd freeze the camshaft - and might have to pull it and do some work on it. Then just look 'downhill' for wherever the water wants to run to see where else it might have gotten to. Good luck. Tom "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Tom Dacon wrote: Well, you may not like ee's opinion, but that's probably where you will end up (although you could do it yourself instead of sending it out). This happened to me once, although not in exactly the same way it did to you. What's almost certainly going on is that the water in the cylinders has caused the piston rings to rust to the cylinder walls. The iron oxide freezes the pistons tight in the cylinders, and it's a real bitch to free them up unless you have machine shop resources. The way I freed things up was to take the cylinder head off and fill up the cylinders above the pistons with penetrating oil (I used Kroil, but Marvel Mystery Oil would be just as good). Take off the pan and the rod caps. It's easiest if you remove the crankshaft, but it's still possible without. Let the oil soak in for a long time. Alternatively drive the pistons up and down with a medium-sized hand sledge. On the top use a block of hard wood like oak to cushion the blows. From the underside, you can use a long hardwood dowel, maybe an inch or more in diameter, pushed up from underneath until it contacts the inside of the piston. If you don't take the crankshaft out, you'll have to start from below until you can drive the pistons up away from the journals on the crank. Eventually you'll get the pistons free, and if you're lucky you won't damage them. After you get the pistons out, you can break out the rings, and the pistons will clean up fine with a wire wheel. But now you're probably looking at some serious pitting in the cylinders. If the pits aren't too deep, the block can be overbored to get to a good surface, but you'll need oversize rings and maybe oversize pistons too. The best possible outcome would be if honing the cylinders got rid of the rust without leaving pits. But it probably won't happen. Basically this is a rebuild. In a machine shop this kind of thing is a lot easier because the machinist can tear the whole block down and then use a hydraulic press to get the pistons out. You'll spend days at it. Sorry 'bout that. Tom Dacon "T-Rav" wrote in message ups.com... ee wrote: "T-Rav" wrote in message oups.com... Hello, I was wondering if anyone had any suggestions for me. I have a bayliner that I bought with a rebuilt motor, however, the old owner left the distributor out of the engine and the cover off over the winter and the motor filled with water. I was able to drain the water and add oil, but I can not get the motor to move. I have taken it out of the boat and now it is on a engine stand with the pan off soaking in Marvel Mystery oil. The engine was never started with water in it. Any suggestions on inspecting for damage? Freeing up the motor? Thanks for your help. Pull the motor and send it to the machine shop for a rebuild. Hey thanks for that answer. I am looking for suggestions on freeing the motor and inspection. Not your stupid opinion asshole. Rebuilding it is the very last option for me. Hey Tom, thank you so much for the suggestion. Any suggestion on the bearings? What to look for. Thanks Yes, the carb had the arrester on it and no signs of water in it. The distrubutor is at the back of the engine. I will try removing the timming chain and see if it is the cam that is stuck. Thanks again. |
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