ShipsWoofy
Well-Known Member
Running the stbd engine t'other day, noted the water light flickering and buzzer pipping, no water, we had checked, but we had seen the gasses emptying residual water rather than a good flow, we were mistaken and thought all was good. We now knows what good flow actually looks like (I am trying not to shift blame here /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif).
Well, my 6 year old OEM impeller finally did a yanmar (1GM10) and spinning around the core, the condition of the impeller material was amazing good I thought, 430 hours. This was the original impeller, the other engine failed after only 10's of hours.
Those that know me, know I am not as agile as I might be, I set about swapping the impeller, and I had real trouble, especially replacing the top bolt, the one behind the pulley wheel. In the past this has not been such a problem for me and I have never considered a speed seal as I have twin engines, thus it is rarely an emergency.
My problem was not removing the plate, I have lots of mini spanners from my electronics toolbox, my problem was getting the bolt to take up a thread blind (to me) and I dropped it 3 times into the bilge (her outdoors had to fish it out).
Does anyone think I would have a problem if I fitted the knurled bolts, but not the speedseal, as I am happy not to need a speedseal complete? With the bolts, I don't put much pressure on them to tighten, they are only small and it is a bronze body, it also seems not to take much to seal the thing anyhow.
Also, would the speed seal knurled nuts be slightly longer (thicker plate) so I couldn't buy some from them as spares? Would I therefore have to source my own keeping the exact length of the yanmar bolts?
Another thought I had, I could put a stud into the top hole and use that as a line up and have a small nut on that one, keeping the bolts on the other two as they did not cause me any real problems?
Well, my 6 year old OEM impeller finally did a yanmar (1GM10) and spinning around the core, the condition of the impeller material was amazing good I thought, 430 hours. This was the original impeller, the other engine failed after only 10's of hours.
Those that know me, know I am not as agile as I might be, I set about swapping the impeller, and I had real trouble, especially replacing the top bolt, the one behind the pulley wheel. In the past this has not been such a problem for me and I have never considered a speed seal as I have twin engines, thus it is rarely an emergency.
My problem was not removing the plate, I have lots of mini spanners from my electronics toolbox, my problem was getting the bolt to take up a thread blind (to me) and I dropped it 3 times into the bilge (her outdoors had to fish it out).
Does anyone think I would have a problem if I fitted the knurled bolts, but not the speedseal, as I am happy not to need a speedseal complete? With the bolts, I don't put much pressure on them to tighten, they are only small and it is a bronze body, it also seems not to take much to seal the thing anyhow.
Also, would the speed seal knurled nuts be slightly longer (thicker plate) so I couldn't buy some from them as spares? Would I therefore have to source my own keeping the exact length of the yanmar bolts?
Another thought I had, I could put a stud into the top hole and use that as a line up and have a small nut on that one, keeping the bolts on the other two as they did not cause me any real problems?