mfelthousen
Seaman
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2018
- Messages
- 68
I have a 1977 Starcraft Holiday with an original Merc. 120 I/O. I just replaced the rams, and followed the procedure for bleeding. (while rams compressed, fill reservoir. disconnect OUT hoses at ram, hold 'up' until steady stream of oil comes out. Reconnect hoses. Refill pump. Disconnect DOWN hoses at gimbal manifold, plug holes. Raise drive, then remove plugs. Briefly run drive in 'DOWN' until oil comes out. Reconnect hoses, refill pump.) I am reasonably sure this is the original pump, based on the parts I see in online parts lookup guides (high pressure Prestolite system without a 'clear' reservoir).
The issue is this: when I go to cycle the drive up/down to purge the remaining air I can raise the drive, and lower it once after this procedure. There's no indication of a problem- the drive moves smoothly, if slightly slow. After that initial cycle, the drive will not raise more than a couple inches and the pump labors. I can duplicate this scenario repeatedly if I relieve the pressure on the system by cracking open the lines at the rams, then tightening them up again.
The bushings were all replaced, the pins are straight, and when the rams are off the drive I can lift the drive easily by hand. The gimbal assembly was serviced just before winterization last year. The rams also work fine unloaded. All of this also happened with recently rebuilt rams, so I don't think it is a problem with the rams themselves.
Starting at the battery, I started going through electrical connections again to see if a corroded connection was causing a problem. Unfortunately the main terminal on the 'up' solenoid snapped off while I was snugging that connection down, so I won't know how successful I was for another day or so. My question is... how likely is it that this issue is a poor ground or power connection? I've been told that this style pump has an internal check valve that could stick, and that is the more likely culprit. I know that rebuild kits are no longer available.
Thanks in advance...
The issue is this: when I go to cycle the drive up/down to purge the remaining air I can raise the drive, and lower it once after this procedure. There's no indication of a problem- the drive moves smoothly, if slightly slow. After that initial cycle, the drive will not raise more than a couple inches and the pump labors. I can duplicate this scenario repeatedly if I relieve the pressure on the system by cracking open the lines at the rams, then tightening them up again.
The bushings were all replaced, the pins are straight, and when the rams are off the drive I can lift the drive easily by hand. The gimbal assembly was serviced just before winterization last year. The rams also work fine unloaded. All of this also happened with recently rebuilt rams, so I don't think it is a problem with the rams themselves.
Starting at the battery, I started going through electrical connections again to see if a corroded connection was causing a problem. Unfortunately the main terminal on the 'up' solenoid snapped off while I was snugging that connection down, so I won't know how successful I was for another day or so. My question is... how likely is it that this issue is a poor ground or power connection? I've been told that this style pump has an internal check valve that could stick, and that is the more likely culprit. I know that rebuild kits are no longer available.
Thanks in advance...