natemoore
Master Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2009
- Messages
- 844
My next-door neighbor used a laid-off boat mechanic to do some work on his boat. I originally hired him to replace a couple of seals in my lower unit since he had access to all those expensive tools. Not sure if he's "certified" or whatever, but he did work at a real boat repair shop.
Well, on my neighbor's boat, he either forgot to hook up the water hose that goes from the lower unit through the bell housing to the engine, or he didn't allow enough slack and it pulled off when the drive was raised or turned all the way to the stops, or he didn't use a hose clamp and it popped off due to the water pressure. Whatever the cause, the engine's over-temp alarm went off and when my neighbor got it home, he discovered the water hose hanging free.
So, now he's got a blown head gasket, water in the oil, plus all the rubber in the exhaust system was melted, including the shutter.
So, what are the lessons? If you're not going to do the work yourself (so that you know it's done correctly), use an authorized and reputable shop so that you have some legal recourse if they screw up your engine. I still think you'd be at their mercy, though.
This laid-off mechanic is the husband of one of my wife's coworkers, and they are good friends, although he and I aren't really. They come over to socialize periodically. My neighbor and I have about as good a relationship as anyone could expect to have, borrowing tools, sharing beers, looking out for each other's family and home, etc.
Awkward!
However, before I blame the mechanic, is this scenario possible? The blown head gasket caused such a severe overheating that the pressure in the cooling system made the hose pop off? It has an open cooling system, BTW.
Well, on my neighbor's boat, he either forgot to hook up the water hose that goes from the lower unit through the bell housing to the engine, or he didn't allow enough slack and it pulled off when the drive was raised or turned all the way to the stops, or he didn't use a hose clamp and it popped off due to the water pressure. Whatever the cause, the engine's over-temp alarm went off and when my neighbor got it home, he discovered the water hose hanging free.
So, now he's got a blown head gasket, water in the oil, plus all the rubber in the exhaust system was melted, including the shutter.
So, what are the lessons? If you're not going to do the work yourself (so that you know it's done correctly), use an authorized and reputable shop so that you have some legal recourse if they screw up your engine. I still think you'd be at their mercy, though.
This laid-off mechanic is the husband of one of my wife's coworkers, and they are good friends, although he and I aren't really. They come over to socialize periodically. My neighbor and I have about as good a relationship as anyone could expect to have, borrowing tools, sharing beers, looking out for each other's family and home, etc.
Awkward!
However, before I blame the mechanic, is this scenario possible? The blown head gasket caused such a severe overheating that the pressure in the cooling system made the hose pop off? It has an open cooling system, BTW.