Oily exhaust

tlkenyon

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 30, 2010
Messages
670
Fluid Motion Model
R-25 SC
Non-Fluid Motion Model
3 kayaks, 1 canoe; R-21 (Nellie May I)
Vessel Name
Nellie May
MMSI Number
338219131
Classic R21 with yanmar 30. When I have pulled into the boat lift the past two nights, I have noticed an oily sheen in the water near the stern. Tonight I saw that it is coming from the water discharged with the exhaust. I have never seen this before. I end up with a a rainbow slick 20 feet I diameter or so. The oil level in e engine is ok. There is no oil in the bilge.

Ideas? Is this serious?

Thanks in advance,

TK
 
Just a thought, but has engine performance changed any? You may have an injector that is leaking or way out of calibration. That would be a possible source of unburned fuel in the exhaust. Do you see any similar slick if you just sit idling someplace in calm waters?
 
No change in performance. I have a water temp gage, no change there. Oil pressure OK at about 50 psi. No oily stuff at any other time. I always have a short period of near-WOT before returning to warm things up, but always return slowly to normal temp ( 10 min or so at about 2000 rpm) before hitting the lift. In short, nothing has changed except the oily exhaust. Kinda got me worried.
 
Found the problem. The previous owner installed an oil pressure sending unit on a tee with the OEM unit. The vibration of the engine caused the brass threads entering the engine block to fracture, causing an oil leak. The leak was very small until I started the engine this morning (to take a close look in the daylight)when it cut loose altogether. Ended up with a real mess in the bilge, which was the actual source of the original rainbows. Replaced the missing oil, reconfigured the fittings. Bilge is a mess with a half-inch of oil on top of the water. Gonna put the boat on the lift, pull the plug, and rinse/scrub thoroughly with Dawn into a bucket beneath the boat. Change the oil, etc. Fun.

Amazing how much oil can come out of such a small hole in so little time.

Thanks everybody for the messages...

TK
 
tlkenyon":1ip9vael said:
Found the problem. The previous owner installed an oil pressure sending unit on a tee with the OEM unit. The vibration of the engine caused the brass threads entering the engine block to fracture, causing an oil leak. The leak was very small until I started the engine this morning (to take a close look in the daylight)when it cut loose altogether. Ended up with a real mess in the bilge, which was the actual source of the original rainbows. Replaced the missing oil, reconfigured the fittings. Bilge is a mess with a half-inch of oil on top of the water. Gonna put the boat on the lift, pull the plug, and rinse/scrub thoroughly with Dawn into a bucket beneath the boat. Change the oil, etc. Fun.

Amazing how much oil can come out of such a small hole in so little time.

Thanks everybody for the messages...

TK
Oil absorbent cloth (looks like a diaper) will help with soaking up the oil. West Marine sells them, maybe a local auto part store. I keep about 1/3 of one in the bilge. They absorb oil but not water.
 
Thanks...I will get some. Got a lot of scrubbing to do. What a mess.
 
You are lucky you were there looking at it when it happened. It does not take long for engine damage to occur with a major loss of oil. Thank God you just have to clean up the oil.
 
Yes, I was lucky. Fortunately, the pressure drop at the OEM sensor caused the alarm to go off, and while I was not looking at it, I am sure that the gage dropped to zero. I am looking t replacing the analog gage with a digital gage. The sensors are wore accurate and physically smaller. Looking at the same option for water temp. Also considering an EGT sensor...all low draw digital.
 
You may want to consider a low oil audible pressure alarm if that is feasible?
 
The OEM alarm is certainly audible, but I hate to rely on "idiot lights" or buzzers, as may be the case. A gage can provide warning..... Case in point is my water temp gage. I can back off a little from WOT and not hit the buzzer, and also see when temp has returned to "normal" prior to shutdown.
 
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