Ran the boat yesterday, changed the engine oil on the water (went well). Then I pulled the boat out of the water and drained the LU oil. Oil took forever (hour or two) to drain out. I had the cap off the reservoir but still slow going. When I tried to add gear oil back to the reservoir, it would not go down into the LU. It may just be real slow going and need time but it seemed to be "stuck".
Next issue was when I went to drain the cooling system. My engine has the quick drain valve and, from what I could find, two blue plugs. I opened the quick valve and pulled the bottom plug. The top plug snapped off in the thermostat. It looks like more of a vent valve since it is at the top of the system. The plug that snapped left its threads in the thermostat but the plastic plug is hollow so it is now open to atmosphere. I hooked up the engine on muffs to a bucket of antifreeze and ran it for a bit. It only took about 2-3 gallons before I could see it spitting out the LU. I then popped the large hose off the thermostat and poured antifreeze into the hose until it topped off. Question is, do you see any issues leaving the engine with the broken plug (open to atmosphere) until I can try to easy out the plug and replace next year? Any good advice for getting a broke plug out? Also, looking into the hose area there was a surprising amount of rust, especially because the outside of the engine is so clean. Should I be worried.
Any advice is appreciated, I want to make sure I do not ruin my motor on my first year winterizing it.
Next issue was when I went to drain the cooling system. My engine has the quick drain valve and, from what I could find, two blue plugs. I opened the quick valve and pulled the bottom plug. The top plug snapped off in the thermostat. It looks like more of a vent valve since it is at the top of the system. The plug that snapped left its threads in the thermostat but the plastic plug is hollow so it is now open to atmosphere. I hooked up the engine on muffs to a bucket of antifreeze and ran it for a bit. It only took about 2-3 gallons before I could see it spitting out the LU. I then popped the large hose off the thermostat and poured antifreeze into the hose until it topped off. Question is, do you see any issues leaving the engine with the broken plug (open to atmosphere) until I can try to easy out the plug and replace next year? Any good advice for getting a broke plug out? Also, looking into the hose area there was a surprising amount of rust, especially because the outside of the engine is so clean. Should I be worried.
Any advice is appreciated, I want to make sure I do not ruin my motor on my first year winterizing it.