Fiat4Fun
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Sep 14, 2009
- Messages
- 223
So, let me see if I can make a long story short. I have a 1986 Chris Craft 210 with a 5.7 Merc, Alpha One outdrive. Boat has about 900 hours on it. Many years ago, I hit the skag on a rock, and it locked up my lower drive. Had it replaced, and then the upper went. So I bought a new Merc Outdrive. Ever since, I have had a little bit of water coming into the bilge. I had all the bellows replaced, shift cable, etc.
I then took it to a fiberglass guy to check it out. He did not see any rot or signs of a bad transom. I took it to a Mercruiser shop, and they could not find any issues. However, they thought the only explanation is a bad transom. So, either way, the motor needs to come out. The cost to do the transom was quoted at about 7-8K. They suggested that I run the boat for the summer, then fix it during the winter. One of the old timers around here thinks that the boat hitting the rock, may of "popped" the transom seal.
My thought is, I should pull the engine myself, and see what's happening.
I am good with that, and thinking of ways to get the engine out, with crane or something, but wanted to see if any of this makes any sense? I assume I will be able to detect where the water is getting in once I get it apart and deal with it from there. This is a old boat, and seems worth fixing, but wondering how deep I should go. If the keyhole is rotten, then I can take it to a boat guy and have the transom rebuilt. But could it be just that the gasket is bad? I bilge pump does get the water out when we are on the lake all day.
Should I post this in another area on the forum?
Any advice or thoughts would be appreciated.
Thanks
Bob
I then took it to a fiberglass guy to check it out. He did not see any rot or signs of a bad transom. I took it to a Mercruiser shop, and they could not find any issues. However, they thought the only explanation is a bad transom. So, either way, the motor needs to come out. The cost to do the transom was quoted at about 7-8K. They suggested that I run the boat for the summer, then fix it during the winter. One of the old timers around here thinks that the boat hitting the rock, may of "popped" the transom seal.
My thought is, I should pull the engine myself, and see what's happening.
I am good with that, and thinking of ways to get the engine out, with crane or something, but wanted to see if any of this makes any sense? I assume I will be able to detect where the water is getting in once I get it apart and deal with it from there. This is a old boat, and seems worth fixing, but wondering how deep I should go. If the keyhole is rotten, then I can take it to a boat guy and have the transom rebuilt. But could it be just that the gasket is bad? I bilge pump does get the water out when we are on the lake all day.
Should I post this in another area on the forum?
Any advice or thoughts would be appreciated.
Thanks
Bob