Nonchalant1
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2005
- Messages
- 2,580
- Hatteras Model
- 53' MOTOR YACHT (1969 - 1988)
Has anybody ever heard of the below?
Doug
If you use a stern anchor and restrict the boats orientation to the natural wave direction created by wind or current, be aware that any wave 2 - 3' high can pump water backwards up you exhaust system into your exhaust manifold and from there into a cylinder of you engine. The condition is called a "hydrolock". If now you succeed in starting your engine, not knowing you are "hydrolocked", as we did, you will break the piston tie rod and probably put it through the side of your engine. This pumping action can occure any time there is a rocking/pitching action of the boat equal to more than half the height of your exhaust riser, and especially if the wave is at your stern.
In our case it happened while anchored from the bow, when the wind shifted 180 degrees, with 2 - 3' waves hitting us at 45 degrees to our port bow, with no wind to hold us oriented to the wave, and enough tidal current to hold us at our 45 degree angle. Water was pumped backwards up our starboard, down wave, exhaust pipe, over a 2' 6" exhaust riser, and into our 4R cylinder on a V8 engine. Started the next morning with a BANG, and a hole in the side of our engine block. Suggest everyone install flappers to the outboard end of your exhaust, unless you have some other sort of check valve in your exhaust.
Chuck and Claria Gorgen
ODYSSEE
Still in Rimouski, Quebec replacing an engine
Doug
If you use a stern anchor and restrict the boats orientation to the natural wave direction created by wind or current, be aware that any wave 2 - 3' high can pump water backwards up you exhaust system into your exhaust manifold and from there into a cylinder of you engine. The condition is called a "hydrolock". If now you succeed in starting your engine, not knowing you are "hydrolocked", as we did, you will break the piston tie rod and probably put it through the side of your engine. This pumping action can occure any time there is a rocking/pitching action of the boat equal to more than half the height of your exhaust riser, and especially if the wave is at your stern.
In our case it happened while anchored from the bow, when the wind shifted 180 degrees, with 2 - 3' waves hitting us at 45 degrees to our port bow, with no wind to hold us oriented to the wave, and enough tidal current to hold us at our 45 degree angle. Water was pumped backwards up our starboard, down wave, exhaust pipe, over a 2' 6" exhaust riser, and into our 4R cylinder on a V8 engine. Started the next morning with a BANG, and a hole in the side of our engine block. Suggest everyone install flappers to the outboard end of your exhaust, unless you have some other sort of check valve in your exhaust.
Chuck and Claria Gorgen
ODYSSEE
Still in Rimouski, Quebec replacing an engine