Winterizing Yanmars

The Main Sand Box for bertram31.com

Moderators: CaptPatrick, mike ohlstein, Bruce

Post Reply
jspiezio
Senior Member
Posts: 882
Joined: Nov 25th, '07, 07:21
Location: Long Island, NY

Winterizing Yanmars

Post by jspiezio »

I may have to winterize the Yanmars on the 31 my self this year. Any issuues I should be aware of prior to diving in?
User avatar
Bruce
Site Admin
Posts: 3782
Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 12:04
Location: Palm Beach Gardens, Fl.

Re: Winterizing Yanmars

Post by Bruce »

Nothing you wouldn't do to any other engine to prepare for winter.
jspiezio
Senior Member
Posts: 882
Joined: Nov 25th, '07, 07:21
Location: Long Island, NY

Re: Winterizing Yanmars

Post by jspiezio »

Thanks Bruce, I appreciate it.
Goober
Posts: 72
Joined: Oct 12th, '12, 19:15

Re: Winterizing Yanmars

Post by Goober »

I hope this helps i agree with Bruce my 31 fbc has yanmars with block heaters 120 volt very inexpensive to buy or to install invection heat will circulate water thru entire system when cranking in cool or cold weather no preheat is required quote BR Goober
jspiezio
Senior Member
Posts: 882
Joined: Nov 25th, '07, 07:21
Location: Long Island, NY

Re: Winterizing Yanmars

Post by jspiezio »

Goober wrote:I hope this helps i agree with Bruce my 31 fbc has yanmars with block heaters 120 volt very inexpensive to buy or to install invection heat will circulate water thru entire system when cranking in cool or cold weather no preheat is required quote BR Goober
Great idea, these should be an install on the boat.
Navatech

Re: Winterizing Yanmars

Post by Navatech »

As an added advantage, preheated engines suffer MUCH less thermal forces at startup... Back when I was in the service we had to preheat the 4,000 HP MTU's for a few hours before starting them... Yes, they could be started "cold" but it was considered an "emergency" procedure...
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 66 guests