Dave, I wouldn't lose a lot of sleep. I hydrolocked my Universal Diesel a few years ago (no anti-siphon loop in the exhaust plumbing). Tried to start it but it wouldn't turn over. Like you, I thought it had a dead battery so a added 4 more house batteries. Starter got hot, but didn't turn over. At this point it occurred to me that the engine was hydrolocked. A couple of days later I took a BIG socket wrench and SLOWLY turned the engine over. It wasn't easy, but it eventually turned over. You have it much easier, because Yanmars have a compression release on the top of the vale cover. Just release the compression and turn the engine over and it will expel the water. After several rotations, I started the engine. I ran it for a few minutes and then changed the oil and filter. After 5 years, it still runs great (just sold it).
Gary ~~~~~~~_/)~~~~~~ On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 3:47 AM, David Pulaski via CnC-List < cnc-list@cnc-list.com> wrote: > 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 > > > _______________________________________________ > > Email address: > CnC-List@cnc-list.com > To change your list preferences, including unsubscribing -- go to the > bottom of page at: > http://cnc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/cnc-list_cnc-list.com > > >
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