Vespucci
New member
Yanmar 3GM30 exhaust producing copious quantities of steam. The engine runs great, but as it warms up the steam production increases and the water coming out of the exhaust decreases. When cold/idling there is lots of water coming out of the exhaust.
I have:
Checked and rechecked for blockage - none
Checked the exhaust mixing elbow, cleared it
Checked for any blockage in the heat exchanger - it is clear
Checked the raw water impeller - no problems
Spent $800 on mechanics who so far have not produced any helpful insight
This problem came on fairly suddenly, the 3GM30 engine is 13 years old and has worked without problems so far. So the plumbing configuration, which hasn't changed, is okay.
I replaced the impeller and the problem went away, or seemed to. I did a weekend cruise and put 15 hours on the engine (no wind) with no problems, but last night.... The steam is back.
My only thought is that the water pump body itself is worn, and this is causing the impellers to fail prematurely. In this case impeller failure means a very minor, hardly detectable change in dimensions (not a catastrophic disintegration). As the engine heats up, the pump starts to cavitate, flow is reduced and so the heat transfer into the flow restricted salt water side of the heat exchange causes the water to boil.
I'm ordering a completely new pump in the hope that this will solve the problem.
any suggestions?
I have:
Checked and rechecked for blockage - none
Checked the exhaust mixing elbow, cleared it
Checked for any blockage in the heat exchanger - it is clear
Checked the raw water impeller - no problems
Spent $800 on mechanics who so far have not produced any helpful insight
This problem came on fairly suddenly, the 3GM30 engine is 13 years old and has worked without problems so far. So the plumbing configuration, which hasn't changed, is okay.
I replaced the impeller and the problem went away, or seemed to. I did a weekend cruise and put 15 hours on the engine (no wind) with no problems, but last night.... The steam is back.
My only thought is that the water pump body itself is worn, and this is causing the impellers to fail prematurely. In this case impeller failure means a very minor, hardly detectable change in dimensions (not a catastrophic disintegration). As the engine heats up, the pump starts to cavitate, flow is reduced and so the heat transfer into the flow restricted salt water side of the heat exchange causes the water to boil.
I'm ordering a completely new pump in the hope that this will solve the problem.
any suggestions?