Overheatng Problem

sweetseason

New member
have been fighting and running out of money for the past 3 years with an overheating problem. Several mechanics - most of which I will never talk to again, cant seem to figure it out. It is an I/O 470 merc with the heat exchanger. Both water pumps have been replaced. (the one in the outdrive and the one on the motor)
Please help
The engine will run all day out of the water and work fine (hooked up to a hose)
The engine will in the water all day at slow speeds
The engine will overheat if run for about 20 min at plane speeds
The engine coolent is expelled to the reservoir at this time until it is all expelled and overflows onto the engine block.
The thermostat has been replaced and I can watch the temperature gauge and see when it kicks in at slower speeds.
At high speeds I watch it go up and keep going up untill it overheats.
What is going on?
I plan to dissasemble the entire cooling system myself in the spring but I dont know what to look for considering everything That pumps water or coolent has been replaced.
One mechanic suggested I find someone to hook it up to a dynometer? Everytime I take this boat in it is a $400 dollar bill so I have aready spent more than this boat is worth. Bought the SELOC repair manual for myself for christmas but I dont know what I am looking for. Anyone have an answer for me so I can get out at more than 15mph? 1979v20 470 merc
Thank you
Paul
 
i would call a local merc dealer and ask a tech what he thinks. if its a dealer that has been around they probably have seen that allready.
 
Who put the heat exchanger on?? There is a restriction someplace!! Not allowing the water to flow.
I know a guy that put manfold gastets on backwards and pluged holes that would have stayed open!!
 
Who put the heat exchanger on?? There is a restriction someplace!! Not allowing the water to flow.
I know a guy that put manfold gastets on backwards and pluged holes that would have stayed open!!

I agree Mac, It sounds like there is a wrong gasket installed or installed wrong or corrosion has caused a blockage, or something has been sucked up in there and is blocking one of the passages. When I took my old motor out I found that my drain plugs were blocked with rust/crud, might be the same thing there.
Can't you bypass the heat exchanger and run the motor that way on plane to see if you can isolate between the motor or exchanger?
 
first thing I would do if it hasn't been done(allways start with the obvious) check or replace the resevoir cap(radiator cap), if it doesn't have enough spring pressure it will allow excess coolant out of the engine into the over flow, casuing it to overheat. As I'm writing this i think of something else to check, Do a compresion test!!!! The 470's have unsupported cylinders where they seal on the head, they can and will leak cylinder pressure into the cooling system, usually accompaning low performance, skipping and coolant mixing with the oil( but not allways). One other thing that pops into my head is the exhaust riser, if it is clogged, it will not let enough raw water out of the system for cool water to replace it, especially when running higher speeds, check your exhaust bellows for signs of running hot. Pull the riser and flip it over, inspect the water outlet holes, hook a garden hose to the riser and see how well the water flows out of it More ideas keep coming up, did you check the water pick ups? remove the pickups and make sure there arn't any leftover water pump impeller pieces in there. I ran into a 3.0l that was doing the same thing last summer, tried everything, finally pulled the water pipe and hose out of the transom plate, it had a piece of an impeller lodged in it, we had back flushed the line several times, but untill we ran a snake thru it, it never budged. There are a number of things to check, these were the first that came to me that I've seen in the past causing overheating. Good luck
 
Like spare suggested, check for compression entering the cooling system. If your losing coolant under load, you may very well be losing compression to the cooling system. Get somebody else to go with you on a run and remove the pressure cap and put it under load. If bubbles appear your losing compression to the cooling system. If you don't see bubbles, then I would disconnect your raw water line from the gimble at the heat exchanger. Then start the engine and see if you have good water flow. Then disconnect your outlet from the heat exchanger to the exhaust elbow and check there. You may also try putting a pressure guage inline after the heat exchanger but before the exhaust elbow and watch the pressure when your problems occur. This will tell you if you have water flowing, or if you have a major obstruction.
 
wow! thanks for all the information. My best hope is that there is just some build up or old impeller parts stuck and clogging somthing. They have to be somewhere because I saw what was left of the old ones. From my understanding the heat exchanger might be a source of a blockage. It will be a few months before I get into this project, but I think I will start with ordering new gaskets for everything having to do with the cooling system so when I dissasemble everyhing for a detailed cleaning I can put it back together properly. If it is a cylinder or compression problem I will be lost on where to go from there. I did have the original 79 engine replaced with a rebuilt 82 two years ago and it ran right for a half of a season took the boat back to the guy at the end of the year to fix the problem. He said he replaced the impellers in the water pumps. long story short its got to be somthing simple because the two guys after him cant figure it out either.
I did replace the radiator cap that was rusted and faulty
Is there a way to save this thread so I can go back to this information?
Also it was mentioned that I might be able to bypass the heat exchanger?
Is there a way to modify the system so that it cycles raw water like every other boat?
I live in Michigan so I am not concerned about having this closed system anyway
 
I wouldn't by pass the heat exchanger, that engine was designed for closed cooling from the beginning, I don't know for sure it would cool correctly as a raw water engine, you might be creating more problems rather than fixing the one you have. you could bypass it to check the heating problem,, but it wouldn't tell you a whole lot. that engine uses the closed system to prevent electroalysis between the aluminum block and cast iron head, you'll get that in any water(some just worse than others depending on alkalinaty, temp, and mineral content). Stick with the basics, make sure you used the correct pressure cap, check compresion, water flow, and water out pressure( use a gauge like ferm said)
 
Ive got a 77v with the same engine. While getting mine started the first few times I forgot ta turn the water back on to the muffs and burnt up the impeller in the outdrive (it only takes a few seconds). After replacing it I found a small handful behind the water intakes on the outdrive which stopped the water flow COMPLETELY! I also found a bunch of old pieces in the heat exchanger behind the front end cap. One more thing, is it a 3 or 4 inch exchanger? I think the old 3 inch ones are not big enough. Spareparts bout covered it all.Attach the waterhose and muffs and crank it up and check your water flow. Just dont run it extremely hot, its an alum block with a cast iron head and I dont think it would take alot ta blow a head gasket. Two different metals heating up differently! NEVER start one without the water hooked up!
 
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This thread will be here 10 years from now!! Just use the search when you want it again, type in overheating and anything with the word over heating will come up.
 
just bring it down here and park it in the back yard, just made room by finishing the wiring job on the 15 whaler, it can sit beside the galstron and my v
 
spare parts sounds like the man for sure, and don't be surprised if I try to take up the offer. To be honest this sounds like a problem any of you guys could fix in a couple hours! I'll keep you all posted as things progress. Waiting for the snow to melt for now, but hey its raining so at least I wont be ice fishing! Got to love Michigan winters
 
I'll make it a little more tempting, its 75 and sunny here right now, and just the other day, I caught 8 trout from the dock, kept 5, big fish was 24", 3 released at 13 1/2 ( 14 inch minimum on specs here in SC). "Nothing could be finer than to live in Carolina"
 
sweet:

i had the same problem and ended up changing the engine to a v6 4.3, uses the same multiplication in the outdrive. however you can:

- take end the caps off the heat exchanger and clean the lines with a thin wire brush.
- check the raisers gaskets and make sure they are metal with close passage paper gaskets
- check the timing, the 470 is very sensitive if off timing just a little bit.
- make sure all hoses are straigth and disconect the hose that comes from the outdrive and make sure the drive's impeller is sending water out.
- replace radiator cap

good luck with that engine.!!!

Lesterus
 
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