wcsd106
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2010
- Messages
- 182
Short Version:
So... My gut tells me I wouldn't be finding metal shavings on a plug unless something catastrophic has occurred within the #4 cylinder. But, shouldn't I have lost compression around that time as well?
The metal shavings on the plug could have killed the spark on that cylinder, which would account for the loss of RPM and power.
Am I being over-cautious since the overheat to the point of being paranoid?
- Outboard is a 1986 Mariner 115HP Inline 6 without Autoblend (Premixing 50:1)
- Outboard Overheated in Oct, 2018
- After overheat, Compression Test showed ~125psi compression all cylinders
- Outboard has run fine since overheat
- Yesterday while running, outboard suddenly lost RPMs
- After RPM Loss was hard to plane and WOT RPM dropped by ~1000RPM
- Found metal shavings on #4 spark plug this morning
- Metal Shavings in position to impede spark on surface gap plug
- Compression test STILL shows ~125psi on ALL Cylinders
- Limited visual inspection through #4 spark plug hole shows no visible damage to piston.
So... My gut tells me I wouldn't be finding metal shavings on a plug unless something catastrophic has occurred within the #4 cylinder. But, shouldn't I have lost compression around that time as well?
The metal shavings on the plug could have killed the spark on that cylinder, which would account for the loss of RPM and power.
Am I being over-cautious since the overheat to the point of being paranoid?