You seem to have pretty good 3 sided access. Of course the oil filter is on the side with more limited access.Here is a view from the front. I've removed the bulkhead that pretty much bridges over the center of the engine for easy access while working on this. The sea water injection is on the outlet side of the elbow. I wondered why the green-striped hose disappears into the compartment on the side before re-appearing at the elbow - the ventilated loop has to be the reason and I hadn't thought of that! I thought it must be going somewhere to heat something up, but it didn't make sense because the other pair of hoses on the closed circuit go to the water heater.
Here's the front view.
View attachment 187712
I figured that the foil was primarily to mitigate heat but I hadn't thought there would be insulation underneath it. The 2YM15 that I had on Thunderbird wasn't insulated like this, so that made me wonder. There is a MC-614 external regulator mounted on the wall surface pretty close to the mixing elbow. Maine Sail says it is a bad location for this equipment because of the heat. I will probably want to re-locate it. The engine box is pretty tight and it is in 2 parts. The front box is under the companionway stair. The rear box is in the aft berth.
That layout looks like a dream to work on as compared to my setup in a Nike shoe box:I've removed the bulkhead that pretty much bridges over the center of the engine for easy access while working on this.
Now that you mention it, that doesn't look like a Yanmar mixing elbow and no, I'd very much doubt it's water jacketed. If made from pipe fittings, it's only a fraction of the cost but when it starts to leak, OUCH !That elbow looks to be kinda custom made and not the typical Yanmar one since the injection point is on the "downhill" side, meaning that the elbow is probably not water jacketed..
Mine does this and it’s for the loop. Mine is vented to a through hole in the stern. It’s a tell-tale that the pump is working. It’s a real piece of mind.If the pipe and ell are not water cooled, then the wrap would help with engine room temperature.. If the run of pipe between the engine and the water injection point is long (and this one looks like it may be) it would reduce engine box temps a little..
EDIT: I find it strange to see the exchanger sea water outlet hose going away forward and port.. Must be a vented loop on the other side of the bulkhead?? The injection nipple into the elbow is not visible but it looks to be on the forward side of the elbow, covered and out of sight from this angle..??
On my last boat with a Volvo MD7A the exhaust riser was made from off the shelf parts and pieces. When it finally broke (a long story in itself) I was able to create a temporary riser after a couple of trips to the big box HW store. Later I replicated the original.Now that you mention it, that doesn't look like a Yanmar mixing elbow and no, I'd very much doubt it's water jacketed. If made from pipe fittings, it's only a fraction of the cost but when it starts to leak, OUCH !
Wow, that's a lot of space to work on that engine!Beneath the aluminum foil is an insulating wrap. If you are lucky the wrap is fiberglass, if not it is asbestos. The foil helps to protect the underlying wrap and keeps fiber bits from floating freely around the cabin. If you peel a little away you will be able to see what the insulating material is, yellow/golden its fiberglass, grayish its asbestos.
Given the age of the boat, I would agree. But ya never know what thoughts have gone through a PO's mind.Wow, that's a lot of space to work on that engine!
Doubt if Catalina would be wrapping the exhaust elbow with asbestos, in a late model boat. With the hazardous nature of asbestos well documented, they wouldn't want their factory workers nor boat owners to be exposed to the stuff. That would be a huge liability for Catalina. Now if some boatyard decided to wrap it, who knows what it is.