I am sure this question has a very simple answer, but due to the construction and hidden nature of 2 water cooling pipes, I cannot figure where and what they do. So, the engine is a Westerbeke diesel M25XPBC. It is a fresh water/raw water system with a water heater option. I am quite familiar with engines, but I appear to have a mystery couple of pipes!
The attached picture shows 2 pipes going off into the rear of the picture. They are not the pipes to the water heater, I know where they are. One pipe at the engine end comes off the bottom left corner of heat exchanger. The other pipe at the engine end connects to the exhaust. I have tried to trace them but they simply disappear behind mouldings which cannot be removed. I suspect one pipe goes to a skin fitting above the water line, but I could be wrong.
As one end connects to the exhaust, then I think that is raw water being pumped into the exhaust on its way out to the sea. So what is happening where I cannot see?
The 2 pipes in the foreground are the flow/return to the heater.
The reason for needing to know, apart from curiosity, is I need to replace lots of cooling pipes and I have to understand where these go and if they are critical.
The attached picture shows 2 pipes going off into the rear of the picture. They are not the pipes to the water heater, I know where they are. One pipe at the engine end comes off the bottom left corner of heat exchanger. The other pipe at the engine end connects to the exhaust. I have tried to trace them but they simply disappear behind mouldings which cannot be removed. I suspect one pipe goes to a skin fitting above the water line, but I could be wrong.
As one end connects to the exhaust, then I think that is raw water being pumped into the exhaust on its way out to the sea. So what is happening where I cannot see?
The 2 pipes in the foreground are the flow/return to the heater.
The reason for needing to know, apart from curiosity, is I need to replace lots of cooling pipes and I have to understand where these go and if they are critical.
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