Lou C
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2002
- Messages
- 13,024
Ok got a question about condensation in exhaust manifolds. I came across this by accident because I had to remove the Barr Marine/OMC/Volvo exhaust I installed 4 years ago, for access to the steering actuator that needs to be replaced. I ran the engine on the water hose about 20 min, let it cool and then removed both manifolds with the elbows intact. I was surprised to find a bit of water in each exhaust port of the manifold, not in the cyl head, and nothing was rusted. What's got me wondering is this, for a long time I had heard, that salt water cooled engines should run a 140 stat. I looked high and low, never found one, till I found that Volvo used one on the 7.4 liter engines some time back and they used the same OMC style stat housing, so that stat fit fine even looks like its made by the same company as all the 160 stats I used in the past (same markings, patent etc). So the engine runs real cool now, between 135-145 vs with the 160, it ran from 160-175. I'm wondering if this is due to using the lower temp stat, because once the stat opens, the warm water from the stat housing exits the manifolds, but with the lower temp stat the engine is running approx 30 degrees colder. I know that probably 100% of OMC engines and 90% of Volvo engines all used 160 stats. The cooling systems used on all OMCs and Volvos (raw water cooling) all appear to be of the cold manifold design, so these do run cooler than a warm manifold set up where the manifold will be close to or even slightly above engine temp, since they don't get water till the stat opens and has been heated by the engine.
As far as salt build up in the engine, well when I had it apart 4 years ago to replace the heads, I did not see any evidence of this, but it was a nagging thought in the back of my mind.
Thoughts?
while I have the boat out for repair I put the 160 back in. I'm wondering if OMC and Volvo used the 160 stats due to their use of the cold manifold design. These idle at 95-100 and only get as hot as 125 after coming off plane, I recall reading somewhere there is a threshold temp below which condensation will occur, might be 120* or so....
As far as salt build up in the engine, well when I had it apart 4 years ago to replace the heads, I did not see any evidence of this, but it was a nagging thought in the back of my mind.
Thoughts?
while I have the boat out for repair I put the 160 back in. I'm wondering if OMC and Volvo used the 160 stats due to their use of the cold manifold design. These idle at 95-100 and only get as hot as 125 after coming off plane, I recall reading somewhere there is a threshold temp below which condensation will occur, might be 120* or so....