I replaced all three bellows on my alpha 1 gen 2, this fall. In addition, I also replaced the trim sender/limit switches and lower shift cable. All went well. I tested it on the water, today and I have a very small leak coming from somewhere. I had a small amount of water in the bilge that was rising very, very, slowly. Running the bilge pump every 15 minutes yielded only about 1 cup of water.
I brought it home and pulled the drive immediately. There was no water in the U-joint bellows. That's good. That leaves either the shift bellows or the trim sender wire plug. The shift bellows looks good. The clamp is tight. I did use bellows adhesive on it. I used a zip tie on the aft side of the shift bellows (as many people do). That is tight, too.
I am leaning toward thinking it's the trim sender/limit plug not being tight enough. When I tightened that bolt, I didn't torque it down. I just tightened it by feel, although, I thought it was tight enough. I did use aviation form-a-gasket on the bolt threads.
How should I troubleshoot this? I certainly cannot see that far under and behind the engine to troubleshoot. Perhaps I could use a bright light and mirror while I have it in the water to try to see where it's coming from. I'm not sure I could see a dribble without feeling for it and I cannot reach the shift cable entry. I may be able to reach the trim wire entry.
I brought it home and pulled the drive immediately. There was no water in the U-joint bellows. That's good. That leaves either the shift bellows or the trim sender wire plug. The shift bellows looks good. The clamp is tight. I did use bellows adhesive on it. I used a zip tie on the aft side of the shift bellows (as many people do). That is tight, too.
I am leaning toward thinking it's the trim sender/limit plug not being tight enough. When I tightened that bolt, I didn't torque it down. I just tightened it by feel, although, I thought it was tight enough. I did use aviation form-a-gasket on the bolt threads.
How should I troubleshoot this? I certainly cannot see that far under and behind the engine to troubleshoot. Perhaps I could use a bright light and mirror while I have it in the water to try to see where it's coming from. I'm not sure I could see a dribble without feeling for it and I cannot reach the shift cable entry. I may be able to reach the trim wire entry.