doca
Well-Known Member
The previous owner put a screwed in bolt instead of a dip stick the in the oil hole. This bolt is removed and the dip stick used when checking the oil level, after which the bolt is then screwed in again. So, I checked the oil before moving off and all seemed well, dip stick back in the toolbox the engine was started and away we went. It was rather calm so the engine was used a lot and it was as reliable as usual.
We eventually arrived back at the pontoon and the tidy up began before leaving for home. To my horror, I found the oil hole bolt lying forgotten under some papers on the navigation table and I assumed the worst, expecting to see the engine compartment coated in oil spouted all over from the open dip stick hole. I was delighted to find the engine compartment as clean as usual, inspite of the hole being open. Is this normal, or is there something wrong with the engine? I am not mechanically inclined but I did think that engines are subject to all sorts of compressive forces striving to blow the thing apart.
We eventually arrived back at the pontoon and the tidy up began before leaving for home. To my horror, I found the oil hole bolt lying forgotten under some papers on the navigation table and I assumed the worst, expecting to see the engine compartment coated in oil spouted all over from the open dip stick hole. I was delighted to find the engine compartment as clean as usual, inspite of the hole being open. Is this normal, or is there something wrong with the engine? I am not mechanically inclined but I did think that engines are subject to all sorts of compressive forces striving to blow the thing apart.