115 6c TOP piston cylinder issue

Chris1956

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 25, 2004
Messages
28,838
Yes, the two ring pistons use a keystone-shaped ring. It is not compatible with the older 3 ring pistons.

Most of the 1/4" bolts on the head of my engine could be drilled thru the block casting and a new bolt and nut installed externally. I probably broke 3/4 of them, since my motor was used in salt water. Ironically the one or two bolts that could not be drilled thru, came out without an issue.
 

ianmoore

Petty Officer 1st Class
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Jun 5, 2014
Messages
213
Yes, the two ring pistons use a keystone-shaped ring. It is not compatible with the older 3 ring pistons.

Most of the 1/4" bolts on the head of my engine could be drilled thru the block casting and a new bolt and nut installed externally. I probably broke 3/4 of them, since my motor was used in salt water. Ironically the one or two bolts that could not be drilled thru, came out without an issue.
Mine is a salt water motor too. I was honestly amazed to only have one stuck bolt in whole motor. I went really slow, used heat and lots of pb. I did break off 2-3 bolt heads on that section, but was able to get them off and out.

Honestly, being in the salt is my biggest concern. I’d like to keep this motor for a while. I really like it, but there were some decent salt deposits and I have flushed the motor every time I’ve taken it out.

Anything preventative you did in that regard after rebuild?
 

Chris1956

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 25, 2004
Messages
28,838
Unfortunately, what I found was that the aluminum alloy of the block was getting softer due to the saltwater exposure. Bolts would strip easier and some of the castings would get some powdered corrosion.

I never flushed my engine because I kept it tied to the dock in saltwater, and there was no good way to flush it.

It was a '77 which was the last Merc 1500 model year. I had it from just about new in 1980, until it thru a rod in 2008, and it was kept in saltwater from 1993 onward. It also sunk at the dock twice, causing me to tear it down and wash it out.

If you can flush it after every use and use corrosion guard on the block, it should last. Fresh fuel and good cooling are essential or they cook pistons.

Also, the motor has no thermostat, so they depend on the engine spinning fast enough to cool the heat it generates. Don't overprop or overload the boat, as the cooling margin is good but there is not a lot of extra cooling.
 

ianmoore

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Jun 5, 2014
Messages
213
Those are a Onetime Use Only Screw/Bolt
Yes. Ive been reading up on them. I read someone working on a rebuild that actually had an issue with new OEM mercury bolts. Does anyone have experience with the WSM road bolts?
 
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