den458
Member
A fan of SeaDoo PWCs, I bought 3 new, still have 2. My 2004 GTI LE RFI was unbelievably fuel & oil efficient, a dream to own. Here is background for it's issues now:
In 2012, the pump bearing failed. I removed the pump, bought a pump rebuild kit + wear ring, planned a spare time rebuild. Then I bought a new 2013 Wake 155 & really enjoy it, & sort of forgot about the old RFI.
3 years later, no free time, I took the pump, box of replacement parts to the dealership where I bought the Wake 155 & they agreed to rebuild my pump for an hour labor. Pump rebuilt, I took the SKI to the dealership & they reinstalled the pump in the SKI for another hour labor, that was 3 months ago.
This last weekend in my driveway, battery charged, garden hose connected, it started immediately & sounded eager to run, just like always, really amazing on 3 year old gas. I let it run 2-3 minutes, water discharging from the pump & the front-left spout as it should, then I shut it off, & thought it was ready for a run out on the river. Paranoid about damaging something, I didn't run it 10 minutes or carefully examine anything visually inside the hull while it was running. At a glance while idling, I saw nothing leaking or out of the ordinary. In my mind, the pump had been removed, rebuilt, reinstalled & nothing else had been disturbed.
Topped off the gas with 10 gal of premium, I took it to the river. It fired up immediately on the trailer, seemed fine at an idle for a couple minutes for my wife as I parked the car. I hopped on & we cruised up river maybe 2 miles at about 20-25 mph & it seemed fine... until the engine began to lose power. I steered towards shore at an idle & realized we'd lost some buoyancy. I NEVER HEARD OR NOTICED ANY ALARMS. The engine died, wouldn't restart & stay running & we lost more buoyancy. I jumped off & swam it the rest of the way to shore, with water in the foot-wells.
I pulled it up a little onto a private residential launch ramp nearby. Pulled off the seats, the water level inside the hull was the same as the river level. I felt around blindly for a loose cooling hose. I pulled the drain plugs & struggled to pull it up farther onto the ramp. Gradually, water drained out of the hull but I could not find anything visually wrong, except for the obvious. That resident graciously allowed me to trailer my ski out of the river. Home, I prepared to figure out the leak source. I assumed a cooling system leak into the SKI, or a leak associated with the PUMP re-installation.
Problem#1: I connected the garden hose, turned it on gently, before I could hit the engine start button, I noticed water trickling out where the water pressure regulator / control valve mounts on top of the exhaust muffler / water-box (see pics below). Removed the 2 hoses, then unscrewed the regulator off of the water-box. It looks like the bottom of that plastic housing, which should be threaded, for installing onto the threaded connection on the water-box, appeared to be melted, so it no longer sealed properly onto the water-box, the source of the leak, I assume. Obviously, it got too hot. Why, & what else might be wrong?
Problem#2: I tried to start it, wouldn't turn over. Read the shop manual, suspected a water-filled engine, pulled the plugs & hit the start button: lots of water spray & mist blew out of the holes. Sprayed XP-S lube into the cylinders (per the recovery procedure), hit the starter, more water mist; repeatedly operated starter many times until the water mist was minimal, eventually reinstalled dried plugs & the engine started (great relief).
Problem#3: Took a lunch break & 2 hours later connected the lanyard to try to briefly re-start the SKI, but the starter now makes a noise like its turning but it isn't engaging whatever needs to turn the motor over.
I'm thrilled the engine did briefly restart. I'm baffled why the water regulator got so hot (was never in less than 3 feet of water at the ramp). I did disassemble it, looked clean inside. I'll pick up another. I assumed that the floatation inside the hull would keep the air intake above water level, but maybe not, & that's why I had cylinders full of water. I'd like to winterize it immediately as it may get down to freezing tomorrow night, but suddenly the starter doesn't engage (I'll pull it into the garage for temperature safety).
Could be my 11 year old SKI was ready for a failing water regulator, causing a couple other consequences: water-filled engine, & now a starter that doesn't engage the engine.
I'd appreciate any advise from others who have experienced similar water regulator or starter issues & what the solutions were. Thanks in advance.
![20151013_162418[2].jpg 20151013_162418[2].jpg](https://www.seadooforum.com/data/attachments/25/25790-3b5a899cfea8061dc96476aa47df7252.jpg?hash=O1qJnP6oBh)
![20151015_144254[1].jpg 20151015_144254[1].jpg](https://www.seadooforum.com/data/attachments/25/25791-8eaac02af027aaf4369979e346e4de14.jpg?hash=jqrAKvAnqv)
In 2012, the pump bearing failed. I removed the pump, bought a pump rebuild kit + wear ring, planned a spare time rebuild. Then I bought a new 2013 Wake 155 & really enjoy it, & sort of forgot about the old RFI.
3 years later, no free time, I took the pump, box of replacement parts to the dealership where I bought the Wake 155 & they agreed to rebuild my pump for an hour labor. Pump rebuilt, I took the SKI to the dealership & they reinstalled the pump in the SKI for another hour labor, that was 3 months ago.
This last weekend in my driveway, battery charged, garden hose connected, it started immediately & sounded eager to run, just like always, really amazing on 3 year old gas. I let it run 2-3 minutes, water discharging from the pump & the front-left spout as it should, then I shut it off, & thought it was ready for a run out on the river. Paranoid about damaging something, I didn't run it 10 minutes or carefully examine anything visually inside the hull while it was running. At a glance while idling, I saw nothing leaking or out of the ordinary. In my mind, the pump had been removed, rebuilt, reinstalled & nothing else had been disturbed.
Topped off the gas with 10 gal of premium, I took it to the river. It fired up immediately on the trailer, seemed fine at an idle for a couple minutes for my wife as I parked the car. I hopped on & we cruised up river maybe 2 miles at about 20-25 mph & it seemed fine... until the engine began to lose power. I steered towards shore at an idle & realized we'd lost some buoyancy. I NEVER HEARD OR NOTICED ANY ALARMS. The engine died, wouldn't restart & stay running & we lost more buoyancy. I jumped off & swam it the rest of the way to shore, with water in the foot-wells.
I pulled it up a little onto a private residential launch ramp nearby. Pulled off the seats, the water level inside the hull was the same as the river level. I felt around blindly for a loose cooling hose. I pulled the drain plugs & struggled to pull it up farther onto the ramp. Gradually, water drained out of the hull but I could not find anything visually wrong, except for the obvious. That resident graciously allowed me to trailer my ski out of the river. Home, I prepared to figure out the leak source. I assumed a cooling system leak into the SKI, or a leak associated with the PUMP re-installation.
Problem#1: I connected the garden hose, turned it on gently, before I could hit the engine start button, I noticed water trickling out where the water pressure regulator / control valve mounts on top of the exhaust muffler / water-box (see pics below). Removed the 2 hoses, then unscrewed the regulator off of the water-box. It looks like the bottom of that plastic housing, which should be threaded, for installing onto the threaded connection on the water-box, appeared to be melted, so it no longer sealed properly onto the water-box, the source of the leak, I assume. Obviously, it got too hot. Why, & what else might be wrong?
Problem#2: I tried to start it, wouldn't turn over. Read the shop manual, suspected a water-filled engine, pulled the plugs & hit the start button: lots of water spray & mist blew out of the holes. Sprayed XP-S lube into the cylinders (per the recovery procedure), hit the starter, more water mist; repeatedly operated starter many times until the water mist was minimal, eventually reinstalled dried plugs & the engine started (great relief).
Problem#3: Took a lunch break & 2 hours later connected the lanyard to try to briefly re-start the SKI, but the starter now makes a noise like its turning but it isn't engaging whatever needs to turn the motor over.
I'm thrilled the engine did briefly restart. I'm baffled why the water regulator got so hot (was never in less than 3 feet of water at the ramp). I did disassemble it, looked clean inside. I'll pick up another. I assumed that the floatation inside the hull would keep the air intake above water level, but maybe not, & that's why I had cylinders full of water. I'd like to winterize it immediately as it may get down to freezing tomorrow night, but suddenly the starter doesn't engage (I'll pull it into the garage for temperature safety).
Could be my 11 year old SKI was ready for a failing water regulator, causing a couple other consequences: water-filled engine, & now a starter that doesn't engage the engine.
I'd appreciate any advise from others who have experienced similar water regulator or starter issues & what the solutions were. Thanks in advance.
![20151013_162418[2].jpg 20151013_162418[2].jpg](https://www.seadooforum.com/data/attachments/25/25790-3b5a899cfea8061dc96476aa47df7252.jpg?hash=O1qJnP6oBh)
![20151015_144254[1].jpg 20151015_144254[1].jpg](https://www.seadooforum.com/data/attachments/25/25791-8eaac02af027aaf4369979e346e4de14.jpg?hash=jqrAKvAnqv)