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#11
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"JimB" wrote in message ...
"Jeffrey P. Vasquez" wrote in message ... This time there was no curing it. I dismantled everything upstream and downstream of the water pump and it appears there is no flow through the water pump even though everything appears to be functioning exactly as it's supposed to. The impeller is fine, the belt tension and pulley function are fine and there are no blockages from the through-hull to its egress. Egress from downstream of the pump? or to the pump inlet? Now I don't know the details of your Yanmar, but here goes - Where is your over-temperature sensor? In the fresh water system? Salt water system or in the exhaust? That'll tell you quite a bit and may answer later questions. So, just to confirm, is salt water flowing from the exhaust/outlet when the engine is running? If in normal quantity, then there's likely to be a fresh water flow problem (if the overheat sensor is in the fresh water system). If reduced quantity, then there's likely to be a partial salt water blockage which may not show up in a simple check, but which will effect cooling at higher revs. If no water, there's either a blockage which you haven't detected (downstream of pump?) or the pump is not pumping. You can check most pumps by taking the cover off and turning the engine over with the starter while holding the fuel cut-off. If the vanes don't turn, there's a shear failure somewhere or a missing key, and that's your problem. If they do turn - your pump is almost certainly OK. Back to the partial blockage . . . Have fun. Maybe someone who knows your Yanmar will give you a better story. Had nearly the same problem on a used 2GM I installed on my 28' S2. The problem was downstream of the water pump at the outlet of the cooling jacket. Salt and corrosion had built up to stop the flow. It took some time to remove the corrosion and salt but it now flows fine. It has been a couple of weeks since I looked at the engine so I do not recall the layout. David OHara "Ragtime" |
#12
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"JimB" wrote in message ...
"Jeffrey P. Vasquez" wrote in message new You can check most pumps by taking the cover off and turning the engine over with the starter while holding the fuel cut-off. If the vanes don't turn, there's a shear failure somewhere or a missing key, and that's your problem. If they do turn - your pump is almost certainly OK. Back to the partial blockage . . . jUST adding a little, Did you replace the wear plate on your pump? Is it a jabsco? If it is a jabsco and you did not replace the wear plate that might be a good place to start. Are you getting the same amount of water out of your exhaust? If so than its you fresh water pump, or like jeffery said perhaps your heat exchanger is clogged up. Good luck Joe Have fun. Maybe someone who knows your Yanmar will give you a better story. |
#13
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"JimB" wrote in message ...
"Jeffrey P. Vasquez" wrote in message new You can check most pumps by taking the cover off and turning the engine over with the starter while holding the fuel cut-off. If the vanes don't turn, there's a shear failure somewhere or a missing key, and that's your problem. If they do turn - your pump is almost certainly OK. Back to the partial blockage . . . jUST adding a little, Did you replace the wear plate on your pump? Is it a jabsco? If it is a jabsco and you did not replace the wear plate that might be a good place to start. Are you getting the same amount of water out of your exhaust? If so than its you fresh water pump, or like jeffery said perhaps your heat exchanger is clogged up. Good luck Joe Have fun. Maybe someone who knows your Yanmar will give you a better story. |
#14
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In article ,
"Jeffrey P. Vasquez" wrote: I recently did a standard maintenance replacement of a raw water impeller on a Yanmar 2GM diesel. Everything seemed straightfoward, part for part, no leakage, everything went back together straight away and test runs at the dock were nominal. However, during a move to a new slip the engine alarm went off. A subsequent check revealed nothing. Try the impeller you took out -- it sounds like it was working before. Happened to us once. We got just enough flow for idle power. After that, I'd dismount the pump, leaving the input hose on, put the output into a bucket and power it with a drill. If you get good output, then it's downstream. We also found out that we have about 5 minutes' cruise power with no raw water flow: Takes that long for the fresh water loop to get hot. Probably takes longer if you have a domestic hot water tank in the loop. -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
#15
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In article ,
"Jeffrey P. Vasquez" wrote: I recently did a standard maintenance replacement of a raw water impeller on a Yanmar 2GM diesel. Everything seemed straightfoward, part for part, no leakage, everything went back together straight away and test runs at the dock were nominal. However, during a move to a new slip the engine alarm went off. A subsequent check revealed nothing. Try the impeller you took out -- it sounds like it was working before. Happened to us once. We got just enough flow for idle power. After that, I'd dismount the pump, leaving the input hose on, put the output into a bucket and power it with a drill. If you get good output, then it's downstream. We also found out that we have about 5 minutes' cruise power with no raw water flow: Takes that long for the fresh water loop to get hot. Probably takes longer if you have a domestic hot water tank in the loop. -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
#16
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Check your hoses and a part of the pump housing I believe is called the
impeller cam. It is the piece that makes the impeller deform to cause the water to travel down stream rather than possibly stall within the pump. It is a replaceable part and one often overlooked. "Jeffrey P. Vasquez" wrote in message ... Hello all, I recently did a standard maintenance replacement of a raw water impeller on a Yanmar 2GM diesel. Everything seemed straightfoward, part for part, no leakage, everything went back together straight away and test runs at the dock were nominal. However, during a move to a new slip the engine alarm went off. A subsequent check revealed nothing. Took the boat out and ran the engine for a good hour and there were no issues. The second time out the engine alarm went off again after about the same duration of running time as the incident during the move to the new slip. This time there was no curing it. I dismantled everything upstream and downstream of the water pump and it appears there is no flow through the water pump even though everything appears to be functioning exactly as it's supposed to. The impeller is fine, the belt tension and pulley function are fine and there are no blockages from the through-hull to its egress. The boat is a 1989 S2. I am stumped. Any suggestions would be infinitely appreciated. Thanks, |
#17
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Check your hoses and a part of the pump housing I believe is called the
impeller cam. It is the piece that makes the impeller deform to cause the water to travel down stream rather than possibly stall within the pump. It is a replaceable part and one often overlooked. "Jeffrey P. Vasquez" wrote in message ... Hello all, I recently did a standard maintenance replacement of a raw water impeller on a Yanmar 2GM diesel. Everything seemed straightfoward, part for part, no leakage, everything went back together straight away and test runs at the dock were nominal. However, during a move to a new slip the engine alarm went off. A subsequent check revealed nothing. Took the boat out and ran the engine for a good hour and there were no issues. The second time out the engine alarm went off again after about the same duration of running time as the incident during the move to the new slip. This time there was no curing it. I dismantled everything upstream and downstream of the water pump and it appears there is no flow through the water pump even though everything appears to be functioning exactly as it's supposed to. The impeller is fine, the belt tension and pulley function are fine and there are no blockages from the through-hull to its egress. The boat is a 1989 S2. I am stumped. Any suggestions would be infinitely appreciated. Thanks, |
#19
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![]() First things first: Jim, Roy and all who responded, thank you! To receive such a wealth of useful information in such a short amount of time goes so far in reducing the frustration from this issue that I can't thank everyone enough. You're all tops in my book and usenet continues to rule! Now, back to my regularly scheduled issue... "JimB" wrote in message news:... snip You can check most pumps by taking the cover off and turning the engine over with the starter while holding the fuel cut-off. If the vanes don't turn, there's a shear failure somewhere or a missing key, and that's your problem. If they do turn - your pump is almost certainly OK. Back to the partial blockage . . . Additional information: (everything Roy says I experienced is exactly what I experienced, but I'm going to throw in my diagnostics before I get into that and maybe someone can teach me something about my clinical method as well). I disconnected the raw water ingress into the water pump and sea water flowed freely from the hose (after turning on the through- hull valve). After reconnecting that, I disconnected the hose leading from the egress of the water pump to the engine block, aimed it at the bilge and started the motor...nothing coming out. That seemed pretty definitive to me. (I've left out steps starting with the strainer and all points in between and skipped to the stuff which I think was clear cut and supports Roy's analysis). Btw, I still haven't found the heat sensor; the Yanmar book isn't particularly clear on some details, I haven't downloaded the S2 manual PDF yet, etc., but the engine is definitely hot. And it's raw water, not fresh water (as I understand it). Have fun. Maybe someone who knows your Yanmar will give you a better story. Fun I did not have. Vessel Assist I did have. =) (Roy G. Biv) wrote: I had a VERY frustrating overheating problem, sounds VERY similar to what Jeff describes and Jim has Almost focused on what the problem was . For me it was very frustrating, check strainer, check hoses, check impeller, (still overheats) check pump (ok), pull exhaust (still overheats), replace w new impeller (still overheats) put in 2nd new impeller (still overheats) damn thing would run FINE at idle in the canal, when I get out the channel and pick up rpm it would overheat., seastrainer clear from beginning, no air leaks. take pump cover off, R&R impeller & never find anything wrong. Put it back together and runs fine at idle. (sound familiar Jeff?) Finally I discovered what was happening was what Jim alluded to -- a shear failure. Where the pulley fits on the water pump shaft was the problem. There was enough drag to (pump off engine) to turn the pulley by hand and observe the shaft spin & impeller turn (offering NO CLUE because it APPEARED to be OK). Under load the drag was overcome and EVEN THOUGH I could see the belt spinning the pulley, the drag on the impeller overcame the shaft/pulley drag . The problem was Both the pulley and the shaft, couldn't just relace the pulley had to replace the shaft, to replace the shaft needed new bearings and seals & by the time you add the shaft, bearings, seals, & pulley together as a parts order it made more sense (cents!) to just buy a new pump assembly (not cheap either) Okay, not just *very* familiar, but spot on exact. However, if I am understanding your description, it seems you were in the act of rebuilding or partially rebuilding the water pump prior to the fault? Is it possible that simply opening the back plate, removing the worn impeller (worn, but no missing vanes), installing a new impeller, replacing the gasket and replacing the backplate could result in the sudden occurrence of this shear issue? Could the friction generated by the fresh rubber of the new impeller (and possible dry running, though the engine manual says dry-running will destroy the impeller in seconds, which it didn't or wasn't) have caused a shear issue between pulley and shaft where none existed before? I have read that water flows through the water pump without rotation of the impeller. I note that in my case there is no positive seal within the water pump housing and impeller, is this correct? It seems counterintuitive to me with the whole function of the rubber vanes and the cam within the pump, so maybe I'm just having trouble grasping its operation. There is some slight scoring on the backplate, but it's extremely minimal. If there's no positive seal within the pumping mechanism, what does the scoring affect, other than friction? I think I've bypassed the issue of plugged outlet downstream from the pump (though there is so much downstream of the pump I am confident there will be plenty of opportunity for the suggested blockage to happen in the near future) by disconnecting the feed directly from the water pump and into the engine block and running the engine. Is it possible this is not as well-defined as I'm leading myself to believe? Again, thank you all! This was demoralizing to have what seems such a minor piece of hardware and rudimentary technology present such a huge issue and it was very heartening to hear Roy's story on how pernicious the issue could really be. Deepest regards, [Cool sailing-related .sig here when I are a real sailor] |
#20
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![]() "The Carrolls" wrote: Check your hoses and a part of the pump housing I believe is called the impeller cam. It is the piece that makes the impeller deform to cause the water to travel down stream rather than possibly stall within the pump. It is a replaceable part and one often overlooked. Thanks Jere and the Carrolls! It is profoundly encouraging to have such quick and helpful responses. My thanks. [This was cross-posted to rec.boats.cruising and a fellow usenetter there wrote up an extremely good summary of shaft/pulley shear resulting in exactly these symptoms, if you'd like to hop over there and read it.] Thanks again!! |
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