M
M Burke
I have struggled with the Yanmar 18 hp in my Precision 28 since I bought the boat (used but less than a year old). There seemed to be an inordinate amount of vibration in the engine. The pedestal and wheel vibrated under power. I paid a yard to align the shaft and they completely moved the rear mounts to no avail. I had the injectors removed and calibrated and several hundred dollars later the engine operated exactly as before. The yard said the engine mounts were too tall allowing excessive vibration. I decided to live with it and just sail the thing for four seasons but finally decided I needed to do something with the leaky stuffing box. I know the readers of this forum are high on the CSS dripless box but I don't think it would work with the kind of vibration I have.I had the yard install new packing this spring but when asked, they had installed the wrong size and did not remove the original packing. As you can tell, competent sailboat service is hard to come by around Kansas lakes. I took the thing apart in the water, removed the old packing and replaced with new. When I started the engine, I couldn't get any water to drip from the shaft unless the assembly was so loose water came through the threads. Apparently the original owner had installed the green dripless stuff because it squished out the shaft opening when the engine ran. I've run it this way for a few months (I only motor for a few minutes to get in and out of the marina) and again decided to tighten the unit hoping the packing might have "run in". I can now get a 3-drop/minute adjustment but the box gets really gets hot. I can't touch the thing for more than a second. Even the water drips will burn your hand. Sorry for the long post but his has been quite a process. I intend to remove the shaft and see if it runs true when I pull for the winter but hate to pay for an extra haul and launch. I've read that you can score the shaft by running the packing too tight but how hot is too hot? Any thoughts on this would be welcome.