Marek / Chuck:

I have never checked the actual concentration of the AF leaving the exhaust.....been doing the same thing for 10 years now....you are making me nervous!

Rob Abbott
AZURA
C&C 32 - 84
Halifax, N.S.

On 2015-10-22 11:51 PM, Chuck S via CnC-List wrote:
agree w Marek,
I use about 4 gallons to do the boat if I capture the exhaust. 6 if I don't. Ace Hardware has the best price now less than $2.

Chuck
Resolute
1990 C&C 34R
Broad Creek, Magothy River, Md

------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From: *"Marek Dziedzic via CnC-List" <cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
*To: *cnc-list@cnc-list.com
*Cc: *"Marek Dziedzic" <dziedzi...@hotmail.com>
*Sent: *Thursday, October 22, 2015 10:48:19 PM
*Subject: *Re: Stus-List Hydrolocked!

Rob,

You may not have overly low temperatures in Halifax, but 2 gal of AF would not be enough here (in Ottawa). Have you ever checked the actual concentration of AF that is _/leaving/_ the exhaust? I use about 5 gal (20 l - 25 l). The extra $3.50 is a cheap insurance for not busting (bursting) the heat exchanger or the muffler.

Some interesting tests at Compass Marine: http://www.pbase.com/mainecruising/engine_freeze_protection .

Marek

1994 C270 “Legato”

Ottawa, ON

*From:*CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] *On Behalf Of *robert via CnC-List
*Sent:* October-22-15 21:19
*To:* cnc-list@cnc-list.com
*Cc:* robert
*Subject:* Stus-List Hydrolocked!

Chuck / Dave:


Chuck, I am with you....I don't understand how a few cups of antifreeze would get to the engine this way.

Dave, I do something similar to winterize the engine, but no exactly the same. While on the hard, I fill a 5 gallon bucket in the cockpit with a fresh water garden hose keeping it filled and over flowing if it happens....I run a hose from the bucket to the raw water pump (remove the raw water hose to the pump, of course)......start the engine to flush the salt water and warm up the engine....shut the engine down......empty the bucket of fresh water.....put a gallon of concentrated antifreeze plus one gallon of fresh water in the bucket....restart the engine until I see the antifreeze exiting the exhaust thruhull....system full of antifreeze......shut down the engine.....my Yanmar 2GMF engine and exhaust system takes about the 2 gallons .....always a little left which I put in the head.

Are you absolutely sure you have a hydrolock? As mentioned by a lister, first check your impeller in the raw water pump......if it is fine and all intact, I don't know how you could have a hydrolock but I am no marine engine mechanic.

Rob Abbott
AZURA
C&C 32 - 84
Halifax, N.S.

On 2015-10-22 8:55 PM, Chuck S via CnC-List wrote:

    Dave,

    I'm surprised a few cups of antifreeze would get to the engine by
    the way you describe.  The point where the raw water shoots into
    the exhaust should be angled to enter the exhaust and not the
    engine.  Before it backs up into the engine, your hose from
    cockpit to engine, raw water strainer, the heat exchanger, exhaust
    hose and muffler needs to fill first, before it can back into the
    engine.  That's a lot of water to move.  Also, remember if the
    engine was stopped, the exhaust valve is closed on 3 of the 4
    cylinders, so the intrusion is limited.   Starting the thing might
    blow it all out?

    If I remember right, I can open a water hose under pressure to my
    raw water pump but it doesn't pass through the impeller until I
    start the engine turning.  I suspect your pump impeller may be
    worn and need replacement?

    I'm hoping it is not hydolocked, but not starting for some other
    reason probably electrical, key off, switch off, batteries turned
    off.  Did you hear the solenoid click?  Did the starter whine or
    hum at all?

    Chuck
    Resolute
    1990 C&C 34R
    Broad Creek, Magothy River, Md

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    *From: *"David Pulaski via CnC-List" <cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
    <mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
    *To: *cnc-list@cnc-list.com <mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
    *Cc: *"David Pulaski" <davepula...@hotmail.com>
    <mailto:davepula...@hotmail.com>
    *Sent: *Thursday, October 22, 2015 3:47:46 AM
    *Subject: *Stus-List  Hydrolocked!

    Thanks all for the words of advice!  I'm going to be a wreck until
    Sunday when I can get there to try to resolve this situation.

    So here's how I managed to do this:

    I was attempting to winterize the engine, boat still in the
    water.  First I just ran the engine normally for a while, maybe
    30-45 minutes, while I got everything ready.  After I shut it down
    and closed the raw water intake seacock, here was my winterizing
    plan:  5 gallon bucket sitting on the cockpit sole, filled with
    pink antifreeze.  A length of hose running through the opening
    port in the aft cabin from the cockpit to the engine compartment,
    connected to the raw water side of the water strainer.  Seemed
    simple enough: I could start the engine and watch the level in the
    bucket, adding more if necessary.

My big mistake was attempting to prime the hose with antifreeze. I was just using a small cup to pour some antifreeze into the hose
    from the end up in the cockpit; no pressure. It didn't occur to me
    that the small height differential would be enough to push water
    past the raw water pump into the cylinders, but apparently it
    did.  I didn't realize what had happened until I attempted to
    start the engine, and it wouldn't turn over.  At first I thought
    the batteries didn't have enough juice to restart after my cold
    startup a few moments earlier.  I stabbed the button a couple of
    times, and then it dawned on me.

    I went back down below and disconnected the exhaust hose from the
    manifold riser, and sure enough, pink poured out.  Perhaps I'm
    having a stupid moment but I'm really still scratching my head
    over this.  I really didn't pour much down the hose, just a couple
    of cups. But I'm actually somewhat hopeful that the contents of
    the cylinders is mostly antifreeze - should give some corrosion
    protection I'm hoping.

    Until sunday...

    -Dave


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