Beachbummer
Jetboaters Admiral
- Messages
- 4,076
- Reaction score
- 2,988
- Points
- 352
- Location
- Houston TX
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2008
- Boat Model
- SX
- Boat Length
- 23
So, After an awesome day on the water yesterday, I had my first direct experience with an overheat condition. One engine overheat light came on and it cut out like crazy for about 10 seconds before it shut down for good. I checked the clean out and there were some weeds stuck on the grate, which removed.
It turns out loading the boat just right, and with the tow valve closed on the overheated engine, with the trim tabs at just the right setting, with my Solas impellers... the boat will plane and will do about 16MPH on a single engine at 9200RPM or so (I bet it would have gone faster if I pushed the throttle some more, but I did not want to force the engine )...but Alas, the idiot driving did not clean the weeds from the running engine, so in another few minutes the running engine was out of service too due to the exact same problem. (Shame on me)
After clean out was checked, indeed it had weeds too!!! (Who would have thought) So, I cleaned those off and waited some more for the first engine to cool down and resume the trip. Eventually the second engine also cooled down enough to let me go and the universe was restored.
SO...
1)What's the deal here.... It would have helped greatly if I had been able to run the engine a little longer soon after to move cooling water into the engine once the obstruction was cleared. This seemed not possible as ignition was cut off until the computer determined I was worthy of trust again (Cooled down eventually). Is there a way to jump this? I know it sounds like a terrible idea, but I think once the deficiency is located and corrected it would cool much faster while running vs just sitting there air cooling... Any thoughts?
2)What crappy warning...how about a heads up? So, I need more gauges! What's the best spot to measure engine temp, and put a temp gauge on that? What about water temp on the water streams? The rear outlets seem to run much hotter than the front, at least at idle. Do I need to measure both to know what's going on? What if the flow stops? do I need some sort of water flow meter too?
I'm hoping I can put together some gauges to notice before it's an issue. I was already working on it before it happened as a project for the winter, but this has solidified my interest. Ideas welcome! I'd like the fewest possible gauges that will alert me the engine is not cooling enough, and that if I don't fix it, it will overheat, ideally as long as possible before the ECU puts me on a 30 minute time out.
Any thoughts?
It turns out loading the boat just right, and with the tow valve closed on the overheated engine, with the trim tabs at just the right setting, with my Solas impellers... the boat will plane and will do about 16MPH on a single engine at 9200RPM or so (I bet it would have gone faster if I pushed the throttle some more, but I did not want to force the engine )...but Alas, the idiot driving did not clean the weeds from the running engine, so in another few minutes the running engine was out of service too due to the exact same problem. (Shame on me)
After clean out was checked, indeed it had weeds too!!! (Who would have thought) So, I cleaned those off and waited some more for the first engine to cool down and resume the trip. Eventually the second engine also cooled down enough to let me go and the universe was restored.
SO...
1)What's the deal here.... It would have helped greatly if I had been able to run the engine a little longer soon after to move cooling water into the engine once the obstruction was cleared. This seemed not possible as ignition was cut off until the computer determined I was worthy of trust again (Cooled down eventually). Is there a way to jump this? I know it sounds like a terrible idea, but I think once the deficiency is located and corrected it would cool much faster while running vs just sitting there air cooling... Any thoughts?
2)What crappy warning...how about a heads up? So, I need more gauges! What's the best spot to measure engine temp, and put a temp gauge on that? What about water temp on the water streams? The rear outlets seem to run much hotter than the front, at least at idle. Do I need to measure both to know what's going on? What if the flow stops? do I need some sort of water flow meter too?
I'm hoping I can put together some gauges to notice before it's an issue. I was already working on it before it happened as a project for the winter, but this has solidified my interest. Ideas welcome! I'd like the fewest possible gauges that will alert me the engine is not cooling enough, and that if I don't fix it, it will overheat, ideally as long as possible before the ECU puts me on a 30 minute time out.
Any thoughts?