a pressure test is the best way. if its is piped in with flexible oil lines, 
simply remove the lines, plug one side of the cooler ( or the end of the lines 
if it is easier ) and install a fitting with a gauge on the other side and 
pressurize the cooler, it should be safe to 120 psi or more but im sure 60 psi 
will be plenty.. if it doesn’t hold pressure its bad.. if it is simpler you can 
do the opposite, pressurize the raw water side of the cooler the same way, by 
plugging both ends, the air will then enter the oil side of the cooler / engine 
but wont do any harm...

Eric 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: David Oates<mailto:[email protected]> 
  To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
  Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 7:51 AM
  Subject: Re: [UnifliteWorld] 8.2L Detroit Diesel using oil


        Eric, that's very interesting.  Is there a way to determine if that is 
happening?  It is extremely difficult to reach/remove the oil cooler on that 
engine. That in itself is a positive indicator that being the problem - Ha Ha. 


        DavidO 

        --- On Sun, 10/3/10, e b <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:


          From: e b <[email protected]>
          Subject: Re: [UnifliteWorld] 8.2L Detroit Diesel using oil
          To: [email protected]
          Date: Sunday, October 3, 2010, 1:47 PM


          my guess is the engine oil cooler has a pinhole in it... since oil 
pressure is higher than water pressure, water does not enter the oil system. 
your raw water leaves the cooler and then goes into your exhaust and 
overboard... and you see a slick on one side...
          that’s my first thought ( it happenned to me )

          Eric
            ----- Original Message ----- 
            From: BoatRDavid<about:/mc/[email protected]> 
            To: 
UnifliteWorld<about:/mc/[email protected]> 
            Sent: Sunday, October 03, 2010 1:34 PM
            Subject: [UnifliteWorld] 8.2L Detroit Diesel using oil


            My Uniflite (’84,42’,SE II) is powered by 8.2L Detroit Diesels.
            Starting this year (2010) I have noticed an oil slick that comes 
from
            the exhaust of my Starboard engine.  I also noticed that when I 
first
            rev up that engine (to set the alternator to charge) I get a puff of
            white smoke.  I just finished an annual, 10-day, cruise and I have
            been plagued by the oil slick and the oil consumption on that STBD
            engine.  I have been worried about the engine as long as I have 
owned
            the boat because it is older than the Port engine (indicating that
            some former owner may have abused them) and it exhibits low oil
            pressure (~40 psi which drops to nil at idle) and has always use oil
            more so than the newer Port engine.

            This latest excessive use of oil is unacceptable and I am thinking
            about a rebuild or replacement.  The engine has about 1850 hours.  
The
            oil definitely ends up out the exhaust and on to the water. My first
            thought is about blow-by.  Now I’m wondering if there is somewhere
            that a seal could have gone bad allowing the oil into the exhaust, 
say
            in or around the turbo charger.  I am going to check the actual oil
            pressure, but I don’t know what else to do, and that doesn’t suggest
            anything about the cause of the excessive usage.

            Now that I am writing this down it has accrued to me that I am not
            burning the oil.  There is no smoke!  And, there is no blow-by 
present
            at the breather.  There is no dripping or leaking oil from the
            engine.  There is just a lot of oil being dumped into the exhaust –
            like a couple of quarts each day.

            Does anyone have any suggestions?  I have yet to find a mechanic in
            the SF Bay Area that truly know about the marine version of this
            engine (but I’m about to try again).

            DavidO

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