youen
Well-Known Member
Yesterday I have a look to a 1 GM 10. From 2003 low hours new exhaust elbow start at first but on the water à sort of black oily dash quite long to dissipate.Your thinks?thanks
Yesterday I have a look to a 1 GM 10. From 2003 low hours new exhaust elbow start at first but on the water à sort of black oily dash quite long to dissipate.Your thinks?thanks
1 GMs are often run at too low revs and never get really loaded. Therefore important to run them hard - close to 3000rpm and every so often a short run at maximum which could be as high as 3600rpm. You will then find that although there will still be signs of unburned fuel when cold it will disappear more quickly.
Absolutely. I used to give my an Italian tune-up every few weeks, which basically meant opening up until smoke started and keeping on until the smoke stopped again, after which performance was significantly improved. The first time I did this it took the best part of two hours before following vessels stopped needing their foghorns, but afterwards regular ten minutes or so was sufficient.
That was you? I thought it was Vic 32.![]()
Hi.Can you do your italian tuning on an old engine Which seems to have never been treated liké that.Did you risk to break something during the sea trial
Hi.Can you do your italian tuning on an old engine Which seems to have never been treated liké that.Did you risk to break something during the sea trial
Yes. As I suggested earlier the 1 GM needs to be run at higher revs than other engines partly because the power is limited at low revs and partly because it is salt water cooled. However it is often fitted in boats that are sailed more than motored so just gets short runs at low speed.
I have a digital laser hand held rev counter. Less than £10 on ebay. Works on a small reflective strip on the crank shaft pully.