benjilafouine
Well-Known Member
At 8:00 PM tonight I noticed that the Sea-Doo next dock to mine was sunken (a rented cottage). It had water over the engine. I alerted the owner right away and him and his friend drained the engine bay with a bucket. Once it was afloat, they put the key and gave it one crank but the engine would not crank (three clocks). I told them to stop right away as I was sure the engine was hydro locked.
So, in the boondocks at 8:30 PM they were screwed. I told them that they could leave the machine as is and run to a dealer tomorrow morning. Unfortunately the Sea-Doo is 2 miles away to the public dock and one hour drive to the closest dealer (but I do have a place at my uncle's not far where I could pull it out of the water with my ATV).
Second option was to remove the plugs and try to empty the engine. I told them that I was taking no responsibility for that and that I was not a mechanics. The guys asked me if we wait 24 hours, what? I said engine gone.
So they decided to go with he spark plug removal way (especially that the Sea-Doo was borrowed...). I went to fetch my tools and removed the plugs. I also checked the oil for the presence of water and it seemed just fine (not grey at all). When they cranked it, it cranked just fine and it started throwing water 5 feet high from the three cylinders. They did that for a good five minutes but I felt the battery was going away. I put the plugs back in but it didn't start, the engine would not crank (but it had a much better sound).
So we removed the plugs again and cranked a little more. Only a bit more water came out. I was afraid that there was some water left at the bottom of the engine but with the oil OK, I think almost all of the water was out. It cranked just fine again without the plugs and after one minute it actually started smelling gasoline. I put back the plugs but as expected, it would not crank again. So I removed once more the plugs and sprayed fogging oil in the three cylinders (it is a 2013 model with a 1500 engine, no turbo charge, basic model). Then I put a cloth over the plug holes and they cranked a few seconds. Then I added more fogging oil and put the plugs loosely on the holes with the wires disconnected.
Then I removed the battery and brought it to my place and put it on the charger at 6 amps for the night. We also took the Sea-Doo out of the water as I strongly suspect that the carbon seal has a problem (I didn't check the hull).
Tomorrow morning we will try it again with the charged battery and I may pour a bit of starting fluid in the holes (fluid mixed with 2-stroke oil to be on the safe side of things). If it doesn't want to crank, the guys will have to rush to a garage which is not going to be an easy task in itself.
Also, they sucked rocks with the second Sea-Doo they had rented and the thing will not go more than just above throttle speed. I guess the wear ring is gone. They have to address this second problem as well tomorrow but the local guy should be able to do that for them.
Did I do the right thing with this hydro locked engine? I had that on a 2-stroke before but never on a four stroke. Good thing I am now maintaining my own 2018 model by myself...
To be continued tomorrow...
So, in the boondocks at 8:30 PM they were screwed. I told them that they could leave the machine as is and run to a dealer tomorrow morning. Unfortunately the Sea-Doo is 2 miles away to the public dock and one hour drive to the closest dealer (but I do have a place at my uncle's not far where I could pull it out of the water with my ATV).
Second option was to remove the plugs and try to empty the engine. I told them that I was taking no responsibility for that and that I was not a mechanics. The guys asked me if we wait 24 hours, what? I said engine gone.
So they decided to go with he spark plug removal way (especially that the Sea-Doo was borrowed...). I went to fetch my tools and removed the plugs. I also checked the oil for the presence of water and it seemed just fine (not grey at all). When they cranked it, it cranked just fine and it started throwing water 5 feet high from the three cylinders. They did that for a good five minutes but I felt the battery was going away. I put the plugs back in but it didn't start, the engine would not crank (but it had a much better sound).
So we removed the plugs again and cranked a little more. Only a bit more water came out. I was afraid that there was some water left at the bottom of the engine but with the oil OK, I think almost all of the water was out. It cranked just fine again without the plugs and after one minute it actually started smelling gasoline. I put back the plugs but as expected, it would not crank again. So I removed once more the plugs and sprayed fogging oil in the three cylinders (it is a 2013 model with a 1500 engine, no turbo charge, basic model). Then I put a cloth over the plug holes and they cranked a few seconds. Then I added more fogging oil and put the plugs loosely on the holes with the wires disconnected.
Then I removed the battery and brought it to my place and put it on the charger at 6 amps for the night. We also took the Sea-Doo out of the water as I strongly suspect that the carbon seal has a problem (I didn't check the hull).
Tomorrow morning we will try it again with the charged battery and I may pour a bit of starting fluid in the holes (fluid mixed with 2-stroke oil to be on the safe side of things). If it doesn't want to crank, the guys will have to rush to a garage which is not going to be an easy task in itself.
Also, they sucked rocks with the second Sea-Doo they had rented and the thing will not go more than just above throttle speed. I guess the wear ring is gone. They have to address this second problem as well tomorrow but the local guy should be able to do that for them.
Did I do the right thing with this hydro locked engine? I had that on a 2-stroke before but never on a four stroke. Good thing I am now maintaining my own 2018 model by myself...
To be continued tomorrow...