Lightly used probably means lightly maintained which bolsters @kloudie1 's thoughts.My understanding is that the engine doesn’t have “many hours” on it and the boat looks like it has been lightly used
Very true. Any idea how to change the oil in a saildrive ? Easy, hard ? No experience at all with one.Could mean that the oil has not been changed since new . That would not be unusual for a gearbox "breaking in"
Shoot me nowCost for the SD60 installed was ~13k.
If it’s an SD50 or newer you can do it in the water, and it’s easy with a suction pump, but ideally you do it out of the water to get every bit out because it drains from the bottom. But if you are patient and flush some fresh oil through a couple times you can get it clean from the inside. If it’s an earlier model I don’t think you can do it in the water.What's involved in changing the oil in the saildrive?
Thanks for the explanation.They all seem to have one or more design flaws.
Yup, I think I’m going the certified mechanic route.Thanks for the explanation.
The only design flaw that scares me is that 13K one. I don't think it would hurt to attend church a few more times during the year either. A few extra coins in the poor box wouldn't hurt either. I know I would.
I don’t think you can change the gear oil on the 20 without taking it out of the water. Yanmar says 100 hours so depending on usage it may not have been changed as recommended. The previous owner would have to provide that info.It’s an SD20 from 2014 and supposedly the engine has been serviced annually. I noticed that the tachometer wasn’t working so maybe there’s excessive wear on the gears.
I noticed that the tachometer wasn’t working so maybe there’s excessive wear on the gears.
How do the (I'm guessing saildrive) gears influence the tach. Tachs normally sense from the flywheel or the alternator or with the newer VDO, a few additional points as well.My tach was working intermittently, turns out the plug had jiggled loose on the back, so worth checking that too.
If it’s a 2014 Yanmar engine I’m guessing it’s a YM series engine? If so the tach is driven from alternator pulses, so not anything related to the gears. The tach issue could be caused by a bad tach itself, something in the wiring between the alternator and tach, or the alternator. If it’s intermittent my guess would be a flakey connection somewhere.My tach was working intermittently, turns out the plug had jiggled loose on the back, so worth checking that too.
My guess is he's thinking without the tach they could have been running the engine harder than they should have been and that that could have caused excessive wear on the gears. Based on my experience and previous comments, the owner probably did the engine service annually, but because with the SD20 a haul out is required to change the gear oil, that it was left longer than the recommended interval, depending on how they used the boat, and that's why the Fe came in high.If so the tach is driven from alternator pulses, so not anything related to the gears.
yes Forbin, that's exactly what I was thinking, that since the tach wasn't working maybe they drove the engine harder than recommended by Yanmar. I'm going to have a mechanic look at it just to be sure.My guess is he's thinking without the tach they could have been running the engine harder than they should have been and that that could have caused excessive wear on the gears. Based on my experience and previous comments, the owner probably did the engine service annually, but because with the SD20 a haul out is required to change the gear oil, that it was left longer than the recommended interval, depending on how they used the boat, and that's why the Fe came in high.
Absolutely!!!!All that I know about this is that the more I learn about sail drives, the happier I am to have a shaft.