griffin800
Cadet
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2012
- Messages
- 12
Hello everyone! I've read over many threads here and I didn't see anything quite exactly like what I have, although there were some similar situations. I figure I will give as much info as I can up front to avoid back and forth Q&A about what it was like before and after....
Engine - 1992 Mercruiser 3.0L I/O
Stern drive - Alpha One Gen TWO
Hull - Chaparral 1800SL (18ft bow rider)
Prop - Turning point Hustler 4-blade 19 pitch
Useage - I'm on Lake George, NY. (A 32 mile long fresh water lake in upstate NY.) I'm pulling tubers and skiiers... and yes... i'm running it wide open quite a lot i guess... for what it is. My 19 gallon tank lasts me about 6-7 hours of mixed usage running marine treated 87 grade. If I want to just putt-putt up and down the lake at slow speeds I do that sometimes too and of course get better mileage
Background -
I recently Purchased this boat this spring in used but excellent condition.The Engine was clean, drive clean... interior immaculate. It was well taken care of by previous owners... however, i have NO service records.
When I took ownership, I replaced the battery with a die hard marine battery (I had one from my old 1979 Century merc 228 which I retired)
- Changed all spark plugs with the recommended Ac-Delco Marine plugs. The old ones were not burned or fouled in any way, they looked normal.
-Changed the Distributor Cap, rotor, and plug wires... just because I didn't know how old they were. The old ones looked ok...
- Checked the old/original oil which was in it when I got it (i did this before i handed over any money actually
), and while the original oil was dark, it wasn't a "milkshake".... and was right at the "full" line...
- Changed the old oil with 4 quarts of quicksilver marine grade oil... and added some Lucas for good measure.
- Changed the oil filter as well with a new one.
- Drained the stern drive fluid... it was the good blue synthetic... it had no water... no metal... and was old but clean. Filled it up with new Sierra Synthetic till it came out the vent hole.
- Replaced impeller before ever bringing it out on the water... The old impeller was still in good shape... no cracks.. no missing blades.
- Checked Trim pump fluid. It was clean and full
- Checked power steering fluid. Also clean and full.
Sorry for the long description... but In other words... I did the typical new boat maintenance and I feel I was in good shape for the season.
Situation -
Now, from the time I changed the oil, until this "incident"... I had taken the boat out at least a dozen times...
3 days ago, while out on the water at cruising speed... I heard a familiar "tapping" sound... of valves with low oil pressure. (i used to own a saab 2.0L engine which would have valve "tap" on startup until the oil pressure came up)
I checked the gauge and sure enough the reading was well below where it normally sat (normally between 30-40psi) and it had dropped down to the 10psi range... but never hit zero.
The Water temp gauge read normal... reading between 150-160 on the gauge.
I immediately shut down the engine to avoid damage... and when I removed the cover I went right for the dipstick... and was shocked to see it completely dry. Putting it and and out yielded the same result... barely any drops right on the tip... AKA empty.
Now looking around a bit, I expected to see an obvious oil leak... but there was none.
No oil in the bilge... and no oil spray anywhere inside the engine compartment...
I figured it could be BURNING oil... however... there was never any blue smoke any of the times I brought it out... and no smell from the exhaust at all.
I had 4 liters of oil onboard, and started pouring in 1 liter at a time and checking for leaks. Still nothing leaking into the bilge. I kept checking the dipstick with each liter I put in, but it took all 4 liters before the dipstick read FULL again.
I shrugged... and started it up again... while looking again for dripping / spraying / leaking oil... or smoke... and still there was nothing.
The engine idled normal, the tapping sound was gone, the gauge read between 30-40psi... (the needle just bounces a little... old gauge) water temp was between 150-160... same as before...
I took it easy back to shore... all the while fixated on my gauges... and any abnormal activity, and there was none.
Once to shore, i took it out of the water... and trailered it home.
In my driveway, I pulled the bilge drain plug and watched for any signs of oil. None.
My diagnostic testing so far-
The next day I checked the oil... it was still full on the stick.
I started it up with a garden hose and muffs. It starts right up. a little rough at first but its normal for it for about 30-60 seconds until it warms up a little... I just give it a little throttle then back down... (it's been like this since I got it... seemed normal to me, my Merc 228 was similar).
I let it idle for a bit... again looking everywhere for anything obviously wrong and seeing nothing. inside or outside: there was No oil coming out with the water from the raw water outlet, no oil coming out of the exhaust bellows...
Shut it down, pulled the plugs. All were clean except number 4. Which had some sooty deposits on it, but dry, not wet.
So... I did a compression test according to the Merc service manual (#97-27)...here are the readings.
#1 - 140
#2 - 160
#3 - 150
#4 - 120
I believe that anything over 100psi is a passing result. And with the highest reading being 160, then anything over a 112 should be ok. while the 120 reading is on the low side, only 8 psi more... it still passes by the Merc test standards...
I did the test again with a little oil squirted in each cylinder... the results were
#1 - 260
#2 - 260
#3 - 240
#4 - 240
when i say "squirt", I think i mean "too much"
but at least the results were consistent.
SO...
question.
Is it possible that I am just burning oil in cylinder # 4 and the ring is slightly worn compared to the others?
Is this causing oil consumption, enough to explain losing 4 liters in maybe a solid 30 hours of engine running time on the water?
If the head gasket is ripped... wouldn't I have a milkshake dipstick?
Is there some other way for pressurized oil to slowly leak into the raw water system and exit the boat over an extended period of time??
I really dont want to overhaul this thing and pull the head less than 6 months after buying it... but I can get a "new" merc 3.0 put in at my buddy's marine shop for less than $1500 engine + labor... so...
Thoughts anyone?
Thank you all in advance for your time
-Gavin
Engine - 1992 Mercruiser 3.0L I/O
Stern drive - Alpha One Gen TWO
Hull - Chaparral 1800SL (18ft bow rider)
Prop - Turning point Hustler 4-blade 19 pitch
Useage - I'm on Lake George, NY. (A 32 mile long fresh water lake in upstate NY.) I'm pulling tubers and skiiers... and yes... i'm running it wide open quite a lot i guess... for what it is. My 19 gallon tank lasts me about 6-7 hours of mixed usage running marine treated 87 grade. If I want to just putt-putt up and down the lake at slow speeds I do that sometimes too and of course get better mileage
Background -
I recently Purchased this boat this spring in used but excellent condition.The Engine was clean, drive clean... interior immaculate. It was well taken care of by previous owners... however, i have NO service records.
When I took ownership, I replaced the battery with a die hard marine battery (I had one from my old 1979 Century merc 228 which I retired)
- Changed all spark plugs with the recommended Ac-Delco Marine plugs. The old ones were not burned or fouled in any way, they looked normal.
-Changed the Distributor Cap, rotor, and plug wires... just because I didn't know how old they were. The old ones looked ok...
- Checked the old/original oil which was in it when I got it (i did this before i handed over any money actually
- Changed the old oil with 4 quarts of quicksilver marine grade oil... and added some Lucas for good measure.
- Changed the oil filter as well with a new one.
- Drained the stern drive fluid... it was the good blue synthetic... it had no water... no metal... and was old but clean. Filled it up with new Sierra Synthetic till it came out the vent hole.
- Replaced impeller before ever bringing it out on the water... The old impeller was still in good shape... no cracks.. no missing blades.
- Checked Trim pump fluid. It was clean and full
- Checked power steering fluid. Also clean and full.
Sorry for the long description... but In other words... I did the typical new boat maintenance and I feel I was in good shape for the season.
Situation -
Now, from the time I changed the oil, until this "incident"... I had taken the boat out at least a dozen times...
3 days ago, while out on the water at cruising speed... I heard a familiar "tapping" sound... of valves with low oil pressure. (i used to own a saab 2.0L engine which would have valve "tap" on startup until the oil pressure came up)
I checked the gauge and sure enough the reading was well below where it normally sat (normally between 30-40psi) and it had dropped down to the 10psi range... but never hit zero.
The Water temp gauge read normal... reading between 150-160 on the gauge.
I immediately shut down the engine to avoid damage... and when I removed the cover I went right for the dipstick... and was shocked to see it completely dry. Putting it and and out yielded the same result... barely any drops right on the tip... AKA empty.
Now looking around a bit, I expected to see an obvious oil leak... but there was none.
No oil in the bilge... and no oil spray anywhere inside the engine compartment...
I figured it could be BURNING oil... however... there was never any blue smoke any of the times I brought it out... and no smell from the exhaust at all.
I had 4 liters of oil onboard, and started pouring in 1 liter at a time and checking for leaks. Still nothing leaking into the bilge. I kept checking the dipstick with each liter I put in, but it took all 4 liters before the dipstick read FULL again.
I shrugged... and started it up again... while looking again for dripping / spraying / leaking oil... or smoke... and still there was nothing.
The engine idled normal, the tapping sound was gone, the gauge read between 30-40psi... (the needle just bounces a little... old gauge) water temp was between 150-160... same as before...
I took it easy back to shore... all the while fixated on my gauges... and any abnormal activity, and there was none.
Once to shore, i took it out of the water... and trailered it home.
In my driveway, I pulled the bilge drain plug and watched for any signs of oil. None.
My diagnostic testing so far-
The next day I checked the oil... it was still full on the stick.
I started it up with a garden hose and muffs. It starts right up. a little rough at first but its normal for it for about 30-60 seconds until it warms up a little... I just give it a little throttle then back down... (it's been like this since I got it... seemed normal to me, my Merc 228 was similar).
I let it idle for a bit... again looking everywhere for anything obviously wrong and seeing nothing. inside or outside: there was No oil coming out with the water from the raw water outlet, no oil coming out of the exhaust bellows...
Shut it down, pulled the plugs. All were clean except number 4. Which had some sooty deposits on it, but dry, not wet.
So... I did a compression test according to the Merc service manual (#97-27)...here are the readings.
#1 - 140
#2 - 160
#3 - 150
#4 - 120
I believe that anything over 100psi is a passing result. And with the highest reading being 160, then anything over a 112 should be ok. while the 120 reading is on the low side, only 8 psi more... it still passes by the Merc test standards...
I did the test again with a little oil squirted in each cylinder... the results were
#1 - 260
#2 - 260
#3 - 240
#4 - 240
when i say "squirt", I think i mean "too much"
SO...
question.
Is it possible that I am just burning oil in cylinder # 4 and the ring is slightly worn compared to the others?
Is this causing oil consumption, enough to explain losing 4 liters in maybe a solid 30 hours of engine running time on the water?
If the head gasket is ripped... wouldn't I have a milkshake dipstick?
Is there some other way for pressurized oil to slowly leak into the raw water system and exit the boat over an extended period of time??
I really dont want to overhaul this thing and pull the head less than 6 months after buying it... but I can get a "new" merc 3.0 put in at my buddy's marine shop for less than $1500 engine + labor... so...
Thoughts anyone?
Thank you all in advance for your time
-Gavin
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