oldboat1
Fleet Admiral
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2002
- Messages
- 9,612
I have an old freshwater cooled 305 in my '77 inboard, and I've remained curious about the best running temperature. I go through this every year, but this year I did get overheating (over 200 and climbing), so shut down and replaced both the circulating pump and the raw water pump impeller. The problem was almost surely the raw water pump.<br /><br />Anyway, I now run between 160 and 180 with a 160 degree thermostat installed -- which I think is where I should be. The manual says I should run between 140 and 160, but I think in context the reference is to a raw water cooled system (raw water cooling was the standard system on this model Chris Craft -- freshwater cooling was an option, with descriptions and diagrams appearing later in the manual, but no additional discussion of t.stats and operating temps). <br /><br />I can put in a 140 degree thermostat and see what happens, but I can't quite figure out why the same engine could run well in either the lower range or the higher range. In a vehicle, it would be running in the 180 degree range. But if running at a lower temp might preserve the life of this old engine, maybe that is the way to go.<br /><br />Can anybody clear that up for me?