BOAT SERVICE

You know the drill..

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Drago
Posts: 552
Joined: Sat Nov 08, 2008 5:00 am

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#16 Post by Drago » Mon Jan 28, 2013 4:06 pm

Steve,

This may be the "chute" your looking for. http://www.formafunnel.com/

I think I made mine out of aluminum foil on the Yammi F225 when I took off the oil filter last time.

[quote="OK Toon"]I'm glad I wasn't near any body of water because I had spills all over the place while changing the gear oil and the motor oil. But I did it and I saved a lot of $$ -- still spent over $120 in just parts. I just need to figure out how to do all of this without making such a big mess. One of the worst messes was taking off the oil filter - what's left in the filter after draining the oil, still comes out in the upper cowling. I've seen something on the internet of a little metal "chute" that you stick under the filter to catch and disperse the extra oil outside of the cowling.
Kenneth & Joy
Lake Conroe, Texas
2007 Bennington 2577RFSi
2006 Yamaha F225
Solas 14.25x17SS prop
Best ever top speed 69.2KPH

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slingshot
Posts: 456
Joined: Thu Nov 13, 2008 7:20 am

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#17 Post by slingshot » Mon Jan 28, 2013 6:37 pm

Here is a parts cost breakdown according to what I pay when I do all that stuff myself:

5 quarts of synthetic motor oil (mobile 1)= $38
1 oil filter = $5
1 quart lower unit oil synthetic (AMSOIL) = $14
4 spark plugs= $20
1 water fuel separator (Yamaha 10 micron) = $14
1 Water pump impeller kit=$37
1 tube Yamalube Marine Grease=$7

For a grand total of $135. I say you got a very good deal if he did all the work he said he did. I think your motor has hydraulic valves so no adjustment is needed or at least not for a very long while but I’m not sure on that. I’ve never adjusted mine and I’ve got over 700 trouble free hours with the exception of a rectifier/regulator (under warranty). As a general rule I don’t trust mechanics. I think I’ve watched one to many episodes of “Night Line” where mechanics totally lied and ripped off some unknowledgeable customer. You know the story; only had to change out a fuse and told the customer they needed a new engine.
2007, 2570 Crest LE II
Yamaha F150

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OK Toon
Posts: 627
Joined: Fri Jun 15, 2012 7:03 am
Location: Broken Arrow, OK

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#18 Post by OK Toon » Tue Jan 29, 2013 9:02 am

Drago wrote:Steve,

This may be the "chute" your looking for. http://www.formafunnel.com/

I think I made mine out of aluminum foil on the Yammi F225 when I took off the oil filter last time.
OK Toon wrote:I'm glad I wasn't near any body of water because I had spills all over the place while changing the gear oil and the motor oil. But I did it and I saved a lot of $$ -- still spent over $120 in just parts. I just need to figure out how to do all of this without making such a big mess. One of the worst messes was taking off the oil filter - what's left in the filter after draining the oil, still comes out in the upper cowling. I've seen something on the internet of a little metal "chute" that you stick under the filter to catch and disperse the extra oil outside of the cowling.
Thanks Drago -- I think that may be exactly what I need. I'll get one before my end-of-year maintenance this year.

Bamaman
Posts: 3679
Joined: Fri May 06, 2011 1:44 pm
Location: NW Alabama--Tennessee River

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#19 Post by Bamaman » Tue Jan 29, 2013 9:44 am

ROLAND wrote:
OK Toon wrote:
Roland, for all that you had done, that's doesn't sound like too bad of a price. How long did it take your guy to do all of that maintenance? i'm sure since he knew what he was doing,
OKtoon...can't say how long it took him to do the work. I dropped the boat off at his place last Saturday afternoon and I'm picking it up later today ( saturday ). Found out about the guy purely by accident... got in late from work one night, stopped for gas on the way home around 4 in the morning and this guy pulled up with his bass boat and big 225 on the back.. we got to talking and I asked him who serviced his boat and thats how I found out about the guy.. Turns out he's been servicing outboards since 1996. I don't think I mentioned this in my original post, but when he was putting grease in the bearings on my trailer, he told me that the trailer manufacturer used a really cheap set of bearings and I think he said seals.... told me they weren't hurt or anything, but that they were just cheap and I ought to think about replacing them in a year or so with a "good" set of bearings... he told me it would run about $250.00 Probably will do that next fall since I won't have to put a new water pump in.....
ROLAND: I THINK HE WAS TALKING ABOUT A WHOLE SET OF HUBS, NOT JUST THE BEARINGS. YOU CAN GET GALVANIZED PREASSEMBLED AND PREGREASED HUBS FOR ABOUT $100 PLUS LABOR. MANY PEOPLE WILL ALSO INVEST IN BEARING BUDDIES AT THE SAME TIME.
'12 Bennington 24' SSLX Yamaha 150

Bamaman
Posts: 3679
Joined: Fri May 06, 2011 1:44 pm
Location: NW Alabama--Tennessee River

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#20 Post by Bamaman » Tue Jan 29, 2013 9:48 am

The only problem with changing the oil and draining the lower unit is with my grandson.

He's mad that I've never given his little plastic swimming pool back. They make such good drain pans when changing oil in boats and my diesel pickup (15 quart oil change.)

I think I'll go to Walmart in the Spring and buy him another pool.
'12 Bennington 24' SSLX Yamaha 150

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ROLAND
Posts: 4248
Joined: Sat Oct 03, 2009 4:29 am

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#21 Post by ROLAND » Wed Jan 30, 2013 3:10 am

slingshot wrote:
For a grand total of $135. I say you got a very good deal if he did all the work he said he did. I think your motor has hydraulic valves so no adjustment is needed or at least not for a very long while but I’m not sure on that. I’ve never adjusted mine and I’ve got over 700 trouble free hours with the exception of a rectifier/regulator (under warranty). As a general rule I don’t trust mechanics. I think I’ve watched one to many episodes of “Night Line” where mechanics totally lied and ripped off some unknowledgeable customer. You know the story; only had to change out a fuse and told the customer they needed a new engine.

Slingshot, your right... when I picked up the boat last weekend, I was looking at the bill he gave me and there was no mention of valve adjustments... I asked him about that and he said basically the same thing you said... said he didn't realize the motor was only a couple of years old and with hardly any hours on it to speak of, so no need to adjust the valves....and I agree with you about dealerships.. most of them anyway.... learned my lesson when the dealership actually charged me $25 to air up a trailer tire while the boat was in thier shop for service... :x
Roland & Jo
2010 Bennington 20 Sfi
Yamaha 75 4 Stroke
Shreveport, Louisiana

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STEVEBRENDA
Posts: 906
Joined: Wed Sep 29, 2010 6:08 am
Location: Boat on Table Rock Lake, MO

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#22 Post by STEVEBRENDA » Fri Feb 01, 2013 7:29 am

learned my lesson when the dealership actually charged me $25 to air up a trailer tire while the boat was in thier shop for service...
WOW!!!! That is price gouging to the extreme! :uglypoke
2014 Regency 254
Mercury 250L Verado

I'm not saying let's go kill all the stupid people.. I'm just saying let's remove all the warning labels and let the problem work itself out.

Bamaman
Posts: 3679
Joined: Fri May 06, 2011 1:44 pm
Location: NW Alabama--Tennessee River

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#23 Post by Bamaman » Fri Feb 01, 2013 9:08 am

ROLAND wrote:
slingshot wrote:
agree with you about dealerships.. most of them anyway.... learned my lesson when the dealership actually charged me $25 to air up a trailer tire while the boat was in thier shop for service... :x

BUT HOW MUCH DID THEY CHARGE YOU FOR THE AIR?
'12 Bennington 24' SSLX Yamaha 150

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playcat
Posts: 1535
Joined: Tue Apr 05, 2011 1:06 pm

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#24 Post by playcat » Fri Feb 01, 2013 12:35 pm

I had a marine mechanic shop work on my boat last season when i noticed both carb bowls were flooding in May. Long story short, I had the boat out three times last season, and all three times I was towed back in! The owner is the only mechanic in the place that can tell the difference between a spark plug and a nuclear reactor...The first guy that worked on the carb told me he was an expert since he always put Holley carbs on the race cars he builds...Well, the first try, I got billed $561 for a "rebuild". When i started the boat, I noticed it didn't look like the carb had been removed, and one bowl still flooded like crazy. I told the owner, who sent the guy over to take a look. "Wow, didn't think I had to do BOTH sides, " he said.

The next time it was "fixed", it started and ran fine at the slip, so we took it out to fish nearby. Got ready to leave, and no fuel to the carb...got it to cough once, changed fuel filter, no problem, still no gas in the carb. TowBoat again...

The third time it was"fixed", the shop owner said they had installed the wrong gasket under the carb which covered the fuel inlet (WTF?) and wanted to show me how well it ran now. The owner and I stood over the engine while the mechanic crnked it over. It started right up and ran great...except for the gasoline coming out from under the carb body and spraying out from both fuel inlets!! O rings, we don't need no stinkin O rings!!!
playcat
JC 266 TriToon
Kerr Reservoir, VA

Bamaman
Posts: 3679
Joined: Fri May 06, 2011 1:44 pm
Location: NW Alabama--Tennessee River

Re: BOAT SERVICE

#25 Post by Bamaman » Fri Feb 01, 2013 5:48 pm

I removed the carbs on my Yamaha 115 hp 2 stroke, disassembled and cleaned them. Then I reinstalled the carbs. Total time: 65 minutes.

And bear in mind I'm not a mechanic. I'm just a local yocal with a Yamaha repair manual and a can of carb. spray.

And that was hanging off the back of the boat over the water. It's just not much of a job if you take care not to tear any gaskets.
'12 Bennington 24' SSLX Yamaha 150

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