JASinIL2006
Vice Admiral
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2012
- Messages
- 5,729
In prepping my boat for the season, I noticed the trim fluid was rather milky looking, so I extracted it from the reservoir, put it a jar, and sure enough, some water (a tablespoon or two) separated from the fluid.
The manual recommends replacing and flushing the system, which I was planning to do after the outdrive is back on the boat.
Yesterday, I installed the outdrive, and after it was on, I noticed a small pool of fluid under the drive. It turns out it was trim fluid (must have been what was left in the lines) and it was leaking from the fitting where the down trim line attaches to the rear of the piston. (The 'down trim line' I'm referring to is the the stainless steel tube that runs the length of the trim piston.)
I inspected the fitting where the down trim line attaches to the rear of the piston and it was loose. Since I plan to flush out the system anyway, I loosened the fitting the rest of the way to see what would drain out, and it looked like a little water (a half-teaspoon or less) and some milky fluid dribbled out. After it stopped, I screwed the fitting back into the piston.
My questions:
1. Is it possible that the loose fitting where the tube enters the fitting could be source of water into my system? I don't fully understand how the trim hydraulics work, but I thought the system is pressurized, which would make water intrusion through a fitting unlikely.
2. The manual doesn't mention doesn't provide many details about attaching the 'down trim hose' to the trim cylinder (I thinks it just says "attach DOWN trim hose"). Is there any sort of sealant or dope that needs to be applied to the threads on those fittings?
3. I inspected the trim cylinder, trim hoses and all the fittings for any signs of damage from water freezing, but everything looks OK. Other than filling the system with fluid and flushing it, is there anything else I should do? The trim pump and lines look OK (no leaking fluid, etc.). The boat was outside over the very cold winter (although the outdrive was in my basement), but I'm thinking/hoping the any water in there that froze likely had room to expand.
I plan to refill the system and run it, then flush it until I no longer see any evidence of milky fluid. Anything I'm missing?
Thanks!
Jim
The manual recommends replacing and flushing the system, which I was planning to do after the outdrive is back on the boat.
Yesterday, I installed the outdrive, and after it was on, I noticed a small pool of fluid under the drive. It turns out it was trim fluid (must have been what was left in the lines) and it was leaking from the fitting where the down trim line attaches to the rear of the piston. (The 'down trim line' I'm referring to is the the stainless steel tube that runs the length of the trim piston.)
I inspected the fitting where the down trim line attaches to the rear of the piston and it was loose. Since I plan to flush out the system anyway, I loosened the fitting the rest of the way to see what would drain out, and it looked like a little water (a half-teaspoon or less) and some milky fluid dribbled out. After it stopped, I screwed the fitting back into the piston.
My questions:
1. Is it possible that the loose fitting where the tube enters the fitting could be source of water into my system? I don't fully understand how the trim hydraulics work, but I thought the system is pressurized, which would make water intrusion through a fitting unlikely.
2. The manual doesn't mention doesn't provide many details about attaching the 'down trim hose' to the trim cylinder (I thinks it just says "attach DOWN trim hose"). Is there any sort of sealant or dope that needs to be applied to the threads on those fittings?
3. I inspected the trim cylinder, trim hoses and all the fittings for any signs of damage from water freezing, but everything looks OK. Other than filling the system with fluid and flushing it, is there anything else I should do? The trim pump and lines look OK (no leaking fluid, etc.). The boat was outside over the very cold winter (although the outdrive was in my basement), but I'm thinking/hoping the any water in there that froze likely had room to expand.
I plan to refill the system and run it, then flush it until I no longer see any evidence of milky fluid. Anything I'm missing?
Thanks!
Jim