Sorry this is a bit long, but I want to give all the detail.
OK, this is a new (old) boat for me. 1983 Galaxy Bow Rider with 470 I/O purchased from storage facility (so I have no history). Before I did a bunch of work to it I checked oil (looked OK), cleaned carb and flushed fuel system. Started and ran the boat for about 15 minutes on local lake. All seemed well. Then the boat sits for a month or so before I can get back to it. Replaced bellows and gimbal bearing (fun job). Go to start and run it in the driveway with cups and ended up with a 3/8" stream of oil shooting out of the engine side. Turns out to be the seal for the oil filter... Weird! To compound the problem, the oil is a milky brown (like coffee with cream in it). So obviously there was water in the oil pan. When I purchased the boat (late winter), the oil filler cover was off, so it's possible that the water was in it when I took my initial 15 minute lake spin (seperated and sitting in the bottom of the pan) and then during the lake joy ride it mixed together with the oil.
Anyway... After shutting the motor down to stop the oil fountain shooting 10' into my yard, I drained the contaminated oil out and replaced the filter and oil. Upon the restart the new oil filter gasket popped out of place (almost immediately) squirting more oil all over the place. Obviously the oil pump is working!
Here's what I think might be going on. Once the water mixed with the oil it contaminated the oil filter. The water in the filter caused the paper filiments in the oil filter to disintegrate inside. Then when I restarted the motor (a month later), the filter material was allowed to enter the lubrication system and clogged it up at the 1st small clearance area (at least).
Does this seem right? If so, can anyone shed some light on where that 1st place might likely be? OR what the block lubrication path is (after the oil filter). I would love to avoid disassembling the entire motor to figure it out (although that may be necessary anyway).
I guess I don't understand the By-Pass valve completely. To me it looks like it should dump any un-used pressurized oil back into the pan... So "if" the lubrication system was plugged up someplace after the oil filter, "then" wouldn't all the extra pumped oil end up going thru the by-pass back into the pan?
This is a link to show the block and bypass valve. http://www.mercruiserparts.com/Show_Pictures3.asp?dnbr= 99958&ivar=images/CRUISER/99958/21.png&inbr=1075&bnbr=100&bdesc=CYLINDER+BLOCK%2 C+ OIL+PUMP+AND+OIL+PAN
I do not have much hope of any easy solution, but any help or other thoughts/ideas would be appreciated.
OK, this is a new (old) boat for me. 1983 Galaxy Bow Rider with 470 I/O purchased from storage facility (so I have no history). Before I did a bunch of work to it I checked oil (looked OK), cleaned carb and flushed fuel system. Started and ran the boat for about 15 minutes on local lake. All seemed well. Then the boat sits for a month or so before I can get back to it. Replaced bellows and gimbal bearing (fun job). Go to start and run it in the driveway with cups and ended up with a 3/8" stream of oil shooting out of the engine side. Turns out to be the seal for the oil filter... Weird! To compound the problem, the oil is a milky brown (like coffee with cream in it). So obviously there was water in the oil pan. When I purchased the boat (late winter), the oil filler cover was off, so it's possible that the water was in it when I took my initial 15 minute lake spin (seperated and sitting in the bottom of the pan) and then during the lake joy ride it mixed together with the oil.
Anyway... After shutting the motor down to stop the oil fountain shooting 10' into my yard, I drained the contaminated oil out and replaced the filter and oil. Upon the restart the new oil filter gasket popped out of place (almost immediately) squirting more oil all over the place. Obviously the oil pump is working!
Here's what I think might be going on. Once the water mixed with the oil it contaminated the oil filter. The water in the filter caused the paper filiments in the oil filter to disintegrate inside. Then when I restarted the motor (a month later), the filter material was allowed to enter the lubrication system and clogged it up at the 1st small clearance area (at least).
Does this seem right? If so, can anyone shed some light on where that 1st place might likely be? OR what the block lubrication path is (after the oil filter). I would love to avoid disassembling the entire motor to figure it out (although that may be necessary anyway).
I guess I don't understand the By-Pass valve completely. To me it looks like it should dump any un-used pressurized oil back into the pan... So "if" the lubrication system was plugged up someplace after the oil filter, "then" wouldn't all the extra pumped oil end up going thru the by-pass back into the pan?
This is a link to show the block and bypass valve. http://www.mercruiserparts.com/Show_Pictures3.asp?dnbr= 99958&ivar=images/CRUISER/99958/21.png&inbr=1075&bnbr=100&bdesc=CYLINDER+BLOCK%2 C+ OIL+PUMP+AND+OIL+PAN
I do not have much hope of any easy solution, but any help or other thoughts/ideas would be appreciated.