Does this seem odd--mechanic changed estimate & diagnosis mid-repair? Please help us!
Thank you very much for reading this post. Please share your expertise
as a boat owner. We bought our first boat and we're really struggling (please
see previous post).
We took the boat into one mechanic who showed us a hole (stuck his hand into it in fact) in the bellows on the back end of the boat. I'm learning that these are the exhaust bellows? Is that right? In any event, he said it absolutely had
to be addressed before the boat could be water ready. He also said he'd have to order a kit and since he was in a rural area, it could take at least a week to get the kit and another to get to our boat. That almost forces us out of this season altogether. Since it was breaking our hearts to think we bought it just in time to winterize it, we went to another mechanic.
The second wrote up an estimate for the bellows and a water pump and said he'd get on it immediately -- only it turned out he didn't have the bellows kit. It was supposed to come in today, but it didn't -- we learned as we checked in with him.
But he now says -- good thing no kit, because the boat doesn't need it. Huh? He offered nothing really in the way of an explanation for the change and only said that our issue is a carborator. Mechanic 2 maintains that the boat must not have been run for some time and the gas "varnished" the carborator, which now will have to be rebuilt and he will have to order parts for this as well.
I don't understand. Does it confuse any of you that a hole in a bellows could now be unnecessary to fix and have hidden an underlying carborator issue? The first mechanic seemed adamant that it couldn't go in the water b/c of the bellows hole -- and the initial estimate from mechanic 2 included bellows replacement. But now it's a nonissue?
Is all of this somehow connected to the water pump? I really like this 2nd mechanic but what he's saying doesn't seem to make sense to me. Why the change? I can understand that maybe the carborator always needed fixed and the 1st guy just missed it (perhaps b/c he was scared of overheating due to the water pump)... but the bellows thing is a mystery.
Also, could this carborator problem have harmed the engine as a whole? It doesn't surprise me that the boat may have sat for a year (maybe even two). I'm also concerned about a possible crack in the engine block (please see earlier post), but the oil does come out clean. Do you think we're in the clear on that issue?
I know boating is an expensive hobby, particularly with such an old boat -- but we are now hemorraging $$$ and I'm beginning to get really scared that we are throwing good money after bad.
What should we do?
God bless you for taking the time to read and respond!
Thank you very much for reading this post. Please share your expertise
as a boat owner. We bought our first boat and we're really struggling (please
see previous post).
We took the boat into one mechanic who showed us a hole (stuck his hand into it in fact) in the bellows on the back end of the boat. I'm learning that these are the exhaust bellows? Is that right? In any event, he said it absolutely had
to be addressed before the boat could be water ready. He also said he'd have to order a kit and since he was in a rural area, it could take at least a week to get the kit and another to get to our boat. That almost forces us out of this season altogether. Since it was breaking our hearts to think we bought it just in time to winterize it, we went to another mechanic.
The second wrote up an estimate for the bellows and a water pump and said he'd get on it immediately -- only it turned out he didn't have the bellows kit. It was supposed to come in today, but it didn't -- we learned as we checked in with him.
But he now says -- good thing no kit, because the boat doesn't need it. Huh? He offered nothing really in the way of an explanation for the change and only said that our issue is a carborator. Mechanic 2 maintains that the boat must not have been run for some time and the gas "varnished" the carborator, which now will have to be rebuilt and he will have to order parts for this as well.
I don't understand. Does it confuse any of you that a hole in a bellows could now be unnecessary to fix and have hidden an underlying carborator issue? The first mechanic seemed adamant that it couldn't go in the water b/c of the bellows hole -- and the initial estimate from mechanic 2 included bellows replacement. But now it's a nonissue?
Is all of this somehow connected to the water pump? I really like this 2nd mechanic but what he's saying doesn't seem to make sense to me. Why the change? I can understand that maybe the carborator always needed fixed and the 1st guy just missed it (perhaps b/c he was scared of overheating due to the water pump)... but the bellows thing is a mystery.
Also, could this carborator problem have harmed the engine as a whole? It doesn't surprise me that the boat may have sat for a year (maybe even two). I'm also concerned about a possible crack in the engine block (please see earlier post), but the oil does come out clean. Do you think we're in the clear on that issue?
I know boating is an expensive hobby, particularly with such an old boat -- but we are now hemorraging $$$ and I'm beginning to get really scared that we are throwing good money after bad.
What should we do?
God bless you for taking the time to read and respond!