I know this has been discussed a million times, and believe me, I've searched and read all of the stuff here on this topic. But, I think I have a new angle on it.
Cold it be that my engine installation simply doesn't have enough raw water cooling capacity?
System: 1984 C36, Universal M25 (Kubota D850), 4 year old Oberdorfer M200-15 raw water pump, new impeller yesterday; 4 year old 3" (larger) heat exchanger; 4 year old exhaust riser with injection elbow.
What happens: under load (driving boat), temperature regulates at 180 degrees F (thermostat temp) up 'til about 1700 RPM. At higher speeds temp rises and exhaust steams. Even higher speeds, transom soots up (like I'm steam-cleaning my exhaust system).
Analysis: all the books say insufficient raw water flow.
What I did: checked entire raw water circuit. Through hull clear, plenty of water at seacock, strainer clean, new pump impeller; removed and thoroughly cleaned heat exchanger: found zinc was flaking off, and leaving lots of stuff in the exchanger; removed pencil zinc (for now); checked hoses to injection elbow, including vented loop; checked injection elbow - could look in, but ran a wire through, and poured water in to see if it flows.
The heat exchanger looked a little bit blocked, with pieces of zinc and some marine growth that made it past the strainer.
After reassembly, seemed to get better flow, but still the engine warms up past thermostat temp at higher speeds under load.
I really don't know if it always did this, perhaps it did.
I believe I checked the entire raw water circuit. Maybe the elbow is slightly blocked, I don't know. Maybe the exchanger could be cleaner?
Anyone know what the flow should be, in quantitative terms (i.e., GPM at xRPM)?
Any insight, guesses?
Could it be a problem on the engine coolant side?
Thanks.
jv
Cold it be that my engine installation simply doesn't have enough raw water cooling capacity?
System: 1984 C36, Universal M25 (Kubota D850), 4 year old Oberdorfer M200-15 raw water pump, new impeller yesterday; 4 year old 3" (larger) heat exchanger; 4 year old exhaust riser with injection elbow.
What happens: under load (driving boat), temperature regulates at 180 degrees F (thermostat temp) up 'til about 1700 RPM. At higher speeds temp rises and exhaust steams. Even higher speeds, transom soots up (like I'm steam-cleaning my exhaust system).
Analysis: all the books say insufficient raw water flow.
What I did: checked entire raw water circuit. Through hull clear, plenty of water at seacock, strainer clean, new pump impeller; removed and thoroughly cleaned heat exchanger: found zinc was flaking off, and leaving lots of stuff in the exchanger; removed pencil zinc (for now); checked hoses to injection elbow, including vented loop; checked injection elbow - could look in, but ran a wire through, and poured water in to see if it flows.
The heat exchanger looked a little bit blocked, with pieces of zinc and some marine growth that made it past the strainer.
After reassembly, seemed to get better flow, but still the engine warms up past thermostat temp at higher speeds under load.
I really don't know if it always did this, perhaps it did.
I believe I checked the entire raw water circuit. Maybe the elbow is slightly blocked, I don't know. Maybe the exchanger could be cleaner?
Anyone know what the flow should be, in quantitative terms (i.e., GPM at xRPM)?
Any insight, guesses?
Could it be a problem on the engine coolant side?
Thanks.
jv