OllieC
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2011
- Messages
- 535
Well I just received the latest issue of Boating Magazine. In the Mag, it discusses Manifolds and when a good time to replace them would be.......which freaked me out.
I have a Dry Joint with a Standard cooling system. In boating, it says if your boat lives in salt water you "may" get 5 years and if in fresh you "may" get 10 years on them.
The boat is trailered and has 380hrs on it. I purchased the boat from my dad about 3 years ago which was used in salt. My dad always flushed the motor however he never put any coating on the block when it was sitting at the marina in S. CA.
Now I have it and it has only been in fresh water. The engine performs flawlessly IMO and I am always up on the maintenance.
Here's a pic of my starboard manifold and riser. There is some surface rust, but I see no leaks....should I be concerned?
(this pic was taken when I just got the boat - I've cleaned the bilge and motor up since :redface-new: - the surface rust hasn't increased)

I have a Dry Joint with a Standard cooling system. In boating, it says if your boat lives in salt water you "may" get 5 years and if in fresh you "may" get 10 years on them.
The boat is trailered and has 380hrs on it. I purchased the boat from my dad about 3 years ago which was used in salt. My dad always flushed the motor however he never put any coating on the block when it was sitting at the marina in S. CA.
Now I have it and it has only been in fresh water. The engine performs flawlessly IMO and I am always up on the maintenance.
Here's a pic of my starboard manifold and riser. There is some surface rust, but I see no leaks....should I be concerned?
(this pic was taken when I just got the boat - I've cleaned the bilge and motor up since :redface-new: - the surface rust hasn't increased)
