Michael,

 

I did not pick up on the last paragraph in your message.  The white exhaust
smoke is not something I have ever seen on my boat.   I get a little
blueish/black smoke when I start the engine but once it is running, nothing.
I have never seen, that I remember, white smoke coming from any of the
stacks on all of these diesels that are on the road, trucks, busses,
pickups, etc..  I don't think the exhaust being under water has anything to
do with white smoke.  I would find a diesel mechanic in your area and talk
to him.  I'm not an authority on diesel engines.

 

The manual on the engine states the operating temperature should be between
160 and 190 degrees.  Yours is running over the boiling point of water.  The
other thing to check is the thermostat.  The engine is a Kubota and your
local Kubota dealer should stock thermostats.  The engine model number is on
the bottom of the dipstick. 

 

I second Jack Brennan's message that you probably should not run the engine
until you get this sorted out.  New engines are expensive.

 

Good luck, hope all of this gets sorted out,

 

John Emmerich

C27TR  #5874

Louisville, KY 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
mlong9876
Sent: Saturday, November 21, 2009 6:01 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [IC27A] New Question--Engine Oil Alarm

 

  

It looked like the board needed new questions but more importantly, I need
answers, so here goes....

:-)

There wasn't much wind today so we came back to the marina under power for
the last 30 minutes or so. The engine (5411) was reading a little hot (220 -
230) but not a big deal. As we came closer to the marina, I powered down a
lot, went into neutral and then heard the engine oil alarm. I heard it every
half second (not a consistent sound like when I prime it) and then I put it
in gear. The sound was still present and still inconsistent. I made it into
my slip without a problem. I checked the oil, but it wasn't low. 

After cleaning up, I started the engine to try to replicate what I heard but
could not. I had it tied securely and put it into gear and kept it there for
several minutes at around 2200 RPMs, then revved it in neutral for a while,
put it back under load but could not make it happen again. Any ideas? 

Also, unrelated (or related...I don't know); when moving forward under
power, is everyone's exhaust under water and if so, is it white because of
the outside temperature (low to mid 50's), is something wrong or is that
normal?

Thanks in advance, 

Michael





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to