I am finally back in Cabo with all the tools, gaskets, etc. needed for the tear down. My two past threads give all the gory details. We all decided (me, Chris, Rev Bob, Ricardo, etc.) that the head needs to come off. I did the test suggested by Chris where I looked for an immediate pressure rise on a cold engine. It was there, it went up proportionally to rpm, and it remained after shutdown. At lower rpms the leak is very small (2-4 psi), and at idle and below (off) it closes down entirely. At 3300 rpm it jumps to 6-7 psi and vibrates wildly, and outgasses over the pressure cap. And that was with the thermostat pulled and the temps never going over about 130.
The temp gun says the problem is on the left cylinder bank. Today I first checked compression. #1 170,#3 172,#5 178,#7 177. I don't see any obvious issues there. Then, with unbelievable difficulty, I managed to get the valve cover off and then loosened the valves. I rigged the compression tester hose as Chris suggested and put 140psi on each cylinder for 7 minutes. Nada! No pressure rise in the manifold whatsoever. The leak, if there, is very small indeed. But it sure seemed to leak seriously into the coolant in the past when running above 1500 rpm or so.
So now what? I had to remove so many wires, cables, plugs and brackets to get at the valve cover that I suppose I should keep going, drain the coolant, and pull it apart. I just wish I knew what to look for and exactly where to look.
My current "theory" is that if I look hard enough I will find a crack in the block that opens up slightly when the blocked experiences the torque loads it sees when running at higher rpm, particularly under load (not at the dock). The crack stays closed when the engine is not running and mere pressure is not enought to open it up. I am really hoping that is an incorrect theory and something cheaper is going on. But we shall see.
Question. Is it possible that at higher rpms there is enough exhaust gas pressure in the exhaust manifold to overcome the paltry 7 psi or less in the coolant system and gas could enter the coolant somewhere in the manifold or where is joins the head? It seems unlikely but then all of the stuff we are considering is unlikely. The boat had new manifolds put on just before we bought the boat, and that was done to replace an earlier replacement that was seeping coolant.
All comments and suggestion welcome.
Thanks,
CaboJohn
The temp gun says the problem is on the left cylinder bank. Today I first checked compression. #1 170,#3 172,#5 178,#7 177. I don't see any obvious issues there. Then, with unbelievable difficulty, I managed to get the valve cover off and then loosened the valves. I rigged the compression tester hose as Chris suggested and put 140psi on each cylinder for 7 minutes. Nada! No pressure rise in the manifold whatsoever. The leak, if there, is very small indeed. But it sure seemed to leak seriously into the coolant in the past when running above 1500 rpm or so.
So now what? I had to remove so many wires, cables, plugs and brackets to get at the valve cover that I suppose I should keep going, drain the coolant, and pull it apart. I just wish I knew what to look for and exactly where to look.
My current "theory" is that if I look hard enough I will find a crack in the block that opens up slightly when the blocked experiences the torque loads it sees when running at higher rpm, particularly under load (not at the dock). The crack stays closed when the engine is not running and mere pressure is not enought to open it up. I am really hoping that is an incorrect theory and something cheaper is going on. But we shall see.
Question. Is it possible that at higher rpms there is enough exhaust gas pressure in the exhaust manifold to overcome the paltry 7 psi or less in the coolant system and gas could enter the coolant somewhere in the manifold or where is joins the head? It seems unlikely but then all of the stuff we are considering is unlikely. The boat had new manifolds put on just before we bought the boat, and that was done to replace an earlier replacement that was seeping coolant.
All comments and suggestion welcome.
Thanks,
CaboJohn

