Doc Stressor
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Nov 13, 2009
- Messages
- 1,186
- Reaction score
- 295
- Points
- 83
- Location
- Homosassa, FL
- Model
- Seafarer
I remember my battles with Pyramid Lake deposits very well! If you guys think that saltwater is a problem, you have seen nothing like what an alkaline lake with 25% the conductivity of seawater can do to an engine.
The problem was that I couldn't flush the engines until I got home. After a ~1 hr drive, the carbonates had already dried onto the water jacket surfaces, the thermostats, and anything else that had come in contact with the lake. Flushing through the port with a hose never let water get to the top of the thermostats, so they would cake up and stick in the open position every year or two. In the first couple of years, I would fish Tahoe a lot during the summer when Pyramid fishing was closed. The super-low conductivity Tahoe water would clean out the deposits over the summer and I had no problems. But after I got bored with Tahoe and started fishing other lakes and the ocean over the summer, the deposits became more of a problem. Once the big engine started overheating, it really got bad because high temperatures increase the rate of the salt reactions.
I ended up needing to do a long tub flush with a commercial descaler. Things got a little better when I switched to flushing with the earmuffs, which let the thermostat open. But Pyramid is a constant challenge. I worked on several of my friend's engines and some needed to be partially disassembled and soaked in a strong acid to get them to run cool.
Flushing by running the engine in a tub of vinegar or other acidic solution every once in a while is good preventive maintenance. The high temperature accelerates the descaling process. Add a little detergent to act as a surfactant. It speeds up the process.
The problem was that I couldn't flush the engines until I got home. After a ~1 hr drive, the carbonates had already dried onto the water jacket surfaces, the thermostats, and anything else that had come in contact with the lake. Flushing through the port with a hose never let water get to the top of the thermostats, so they would cake up and stick in the open position every year or two. In the first couple of years, I would fish Tahoe a lot during the summer when Pyramid fishing was closed. The super-low conductivity Tahoe water would clean out the deposits over the summer and I had no problems. But after I got bored with Tahoe and started fishing other lakes and the ocean over the summer, the deposits became more of a problem. Once the big engine started overheating, it really got bad because high temperatures increase the rate of the salt reactions.
I ended up needing to do a long tub flush with a commercial descaler. Things got a little better when I switched to flushing with the earmuffs, which let the thermostat open. But Pyramid is a constant challenge. I worked on several of my friend's engines and some needed to be partially disassembled and soaked in a strong acid to get them to run cool.
Flushing by running the engine in a tub of vinegar or other acidic solution every once in a while is good preventive maintenance. The high temperature accelerates the descaling process. Add a little detergent to act as a surfactant. It speeds up the process.