Originally posted by Roddbod
X
-
-
I will be installing a Flush-Pro next weekend. Does it matter if you install it before or after the strainer? I need to look again, but it might be more convenient after the strainer. I would assume that water out of the hose would be safe to enter after the strainer.
Stephen
Comment
-
I installed a freshwater flush today. Went to home depot and got a barbed 1" tee w/ a 3/4" threaded fitting and a fitting to attach a garden hose, and a cap for when not in use. The whole thing cost less than $12. I installed it between the raw water shutoff valve and the lakewater temperature sensor before the strainer. I simply close the raw water shutoff to direct the water into the motor when running the motor in the driveway. Pretty simple, but works well and much cheaper than flushpro. I didn't see the point in going to the expense of flushpro when all the fancy innerworkings do the exact same thing as shutting off the raw water intake valve. Changed my impellor today too...man what a pain!
Something to think about related to your question... the hose size after the strainer on my 206 is larger than the hose before the strainer - that may make a difference depending on the size of the flushpro barbs.
Comment
-
Finally had a chance to take pictures of my solution. I don't like having a valve that allows the hose to pressurize the motor. It can push past the impeller and fill the motor with water if you are really careless. My setup allows the water to dump out of the inlet until the impeller starts pulling the stream towards the motor. Just don't lose the plug or you are hosed (pun intended). I might add a safety cable on the brass plug so it never gets lost. Total cost about $20, plastic fittings came from Tanks & More (search e-bay for user ID: 6122Yale).
Comment
-
I just got a flush pro delivered from www.skidim.com and they are 57 beans minus 10% plus shipping. installation just involves cutting out some rubber hose (5-1/2") on the port side of the engine compartment between the strainer and the impellar basically. Mine's on 02 SANTE. I had one on my last boat and it made flushing and winterizing a breeze.
Comment
-
Mike, the way I have always solved that is attaching the hose to the intake stream, and putting it in a bucket. I then put the water supply hose in the same bucket. This way the engine is always pulling the water, and if there is too much water pressure from the hose, it just overflows the bucket. The other benifit is that to winterize, you just fill the bucket, and let the engine suck the coolant into the engine.
I also put the bucket under the exhaust to "recycle" the warm water to shorten the warmup cycle. The supply hose only replenishes the water that is spit too far from the bucket to be recycled.
Comment
-
the one ryan e has in his pic has a high failure rate compared to the one scottrob shows. i would get the the perko one that scottrob has and you can get it with a through hole mount if you want. MIKSKI i would watch your setup close you have no way to shut off the intake side you will suck air and that could cause you problems.
Comment
-
Boatech has a good point, and it's valid with every one of these systems. Whenever you run a boat on a trailer/lift you need to keep a close watch on it.
Listen and watch, if the exhaust note gets loud or if you see steam coming from the exhaust you are about to overheat.
Comment
-
I highly doubt that sucking a little air will damage anything. The hose is still providing more than enough water to keep the impeller lubricated. Even if the RWP is not able to draw 100% of the water it is capable of moving, no harm will come from it. There is still plenty of water moving through the motor to keep it from overheating at idle, with no load. My $.02.1990 Ski Nautique
NWCT
Comment
Comment