I just put a newly freshened engine in (old shortblock, but new heads and cam) and installed it in the boat. We fired it up today to break in the cam which means we had to run it for 20 mins at 2000-2500 RPMs. We hooked up the muffs with the hose on full blast. There was a good amount of water coming out with the exhaust so I don't know if this is a flow problem, but after about 10 minutes of running at this RPM the engine climbed past 200 on its way to 240. I shut it off after 15 minute when it hit 220.
Tonight I just pulled off some of the hoses and flow tested the manifolds with the garden hose. There doesn't seem to be a restriction, but I don't know if this is a good indicator. The lower hose from the outdrive did have pressure when the engine was running (it was leaking a good amount when the hose clamp was almost tight, had to tighten it up quite a bit)
Could this just be because I was running it at such a high RPM while out of the water? Does the garden hose on the muffs not provide enough water to keep the engine running cool?
I haven't let it idle yet; tomorrow I'll finish breaking in the cam and we'll see if it overheats at idle.
This is a Merc 888, Ford 302 engine (1977) with a raw water cooling system. Also, there was no thermostat when i pulled the assembly apart - is this correct?
Thanks,
Chris
Tonight I just pulled off some of the hoses and flow tested the manifolds with the garden hose. There doesn't seem to be a restriction, but I don't know if this is a good indicator. The lower hose from the outdrive did have pressure when the engine was running (it was leaking a good amount when the hose clamp was almost tight, had to tighten it up quite a bit)
Could this just be because I was running it at such a high RPM while out of the water? Does the garden hose on the muffs not provide enough water to keep the engine running cool?
I haven't let it idle yet; tomorrow I'll finish breaking in the cam and we'll see if it overheats at idle.
This is a Merc 888, Ford 302 engine (1977) with a raw water cooling system. Also, there was no thermostat when i pulled the assembly apart - is this correct?
Thanks,
Chris