1985 Century Mustang
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2023
- Messages
- 573
Last week or so I replaced my impeller in the sterndrive and everything was running as usual without the thermostat in. With the suggestions/recommendations on this forum, I put in a new thermostat and it seemed to run fine at 140 degrees, which is normal in what I'm reading.
Today I ran the boat again with the rabbit ears on in my driveway and the temps climbed to 180. I shut off the engine and checked the thermostat, It appeared to be fine, but I removed it anyway to trouble shoot the higher temps. I ran the boat again without the Tstat and the temps went up to 180 degrees again, so there wasn't any difference with the Tstat in or out.
With that I pulled the circulator pump and the blades on the pump seemed to be fine and it spun with no issues. I'm not sure if the circulator pump is bad, or the newly installed impeller is bad, in which I highly doubt.
I then took a garden hose with your basic water pressure and placed it into the Sterndrive inlet hose that comes up off the Sterndrive to the engine Tstat area, thinking that there may have been a restriction in that hose, there weren't any restrictions in what I observed, and I was able to blow thru it. I also removed the two upper radiator hoses and checked for any blockages, as they were fine.
So in the below photo I'm wondering if this circulator pump looks defective, do the blades look bad, are they normal? they all seem to be in the same shape as there aren't any irregularities and they all seem to be consistent with each other, I understand it is corroded, but I didn't have any leaks just yet, as this is another reason why I'm replacing it.
I guess I can wait for the new circulator pump to assess the overheating, or I will have to check the sterndrive impeller again.
Your thoughts on what I should check next. I believe I covered everything with respect to troubleshooting the restrictions in the hoses etc.





Today I ran the boat again with the rabbit ears on in my driveway and the temps climbed to 180. I shut off the engine and checked the thermostat, It appeared to be fine, but I removed it anyway to trouble shoot the higher temps. I ran the boat again without the Tstat and the temps went up to 180 degrees again, so there wasn't any difference with the Tstat in or out.
With that I pulled the circulator pump and the blades on the pump seemed to be fine and it spun with no issues. I'm not sure if the circulator pump is bad, or the newly installed impeller is bad, in which I highly doubt.
I then took a garden hose with your basic water pressure and placed it into the Sterndrive inlet hose that comes up off the Sterndrive to the engine Tstat area, thinking that there may have been a restriction in that hose, there weren't any restrictions in what I observed, and I was able to blow thru it. I also removed the two upper radiator hoses and checked for any blockages, as they were fine.
So in the below photo I'm wondering if this circulator pump looks defective, do the blades look bad, are they normal? they all seem to be in the same shape as there aren't any irregularities and they all seem to be consistent with each other, I understand it is corroded, but I didn't have any leaks just yet, as this is another reason why I'm replacing it.
I guess I can wait for the new circulator pump to assess the overheating, or I will have to check the sterndrive impeller again.
Your thoughts on what I should check next. I believe I covered everything with respect to troubleshooting the restrictions in the hoses etc.





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