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2016 Yamaha 242 Limited E leaking from drain plug

IceJason

Well-Known Member
Messages
9
Reaction score
2
Points
62
Boat Make
Yamaha
Year
2016
Boat Model
Limited S
Boat Length
24
I have a 2016 Yamaha 242 Limited E Series that is leaking from hull drain plug. I just replaced it with a new one and it still leaks from the bottom of the drain plug. Is anyone else having this issues, any suggestions?

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Welcome to the yamaha drain plug club. Very common problem. Some suggest swapping o-ring for one slightly larger and others keep it lubed up so it remained flexible. Also make sure the receiving end is clean of all debris and smooth.
 
I work with o-rings in high-ish pressure (up to 500 psi) applications. The o-rings MUST be able to slide against whatever they are sealing, otherwise they stretch and roll when tension is applied. I strongly recommend a good silicone lube on the o-ring, avoid petroleum based products as they degrade EPDM (rubber).
 
Thank you for the feedback, is Yamaha doing anything about the design issue or recommending a fix for us owners?
 
Honestly lube the plug. I noticed mine was dripping when water was in the bilge, I put silicone on the plug and have not seen a drop in the bilge since then.
 
Last edited:
Thanks, I will silicone it up and test it tomorrow.
 
I have a 2016 Yamaha 242 Limited E Series that is leaking from hull drain plug. I just replaced it with a new one and it still leaks from the bottom of the drain plug. Is anyone else having this issues, any suggestions?

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View attachment 94697
If the bilge was never flushed with a lot of water and/or vacuumed, when the boat was new, there is a lot of post-production debris and metal shavings that can cut up the plastic threads and damage them.
Make sure you do not have any shavings and crap in the threads.

--
 
I already cleaned all of the post-production debris and metal shavings from the boat, although after I put silicone on the drain plug it looks to be all good.

Thanks,
 
I keep a tube of this in my clean out tray area. I use on every outing on both my clean out plugs and my drain plug. I also wipe out any grit or grim inside the drain plug threads and lip before I put the drain plug in. Not sure if that will help your situation but maybe worth a try.

 
Where did you get the metal drain plug from? My old 2011 Yamaha 240SX had a metal one and I never had an issue.
 
My plug is leaking as well. Any upgrades on this ?
 
Did you try the lube suggestion above? That is where I would start, if you have not.
 
As mentioned, Silicone spray lube from any auto parts store. I use it on the drain plugs and clean-out plugs. Keeps everything turning smooth and water tight. I also use it on the jetpump housings as a form of protector (don't spray the anodes) and to keep all the rubber/plastic parts lubed. Cheap and easy to use.
 
I sprayed the o ring w/ wd40 silicone spray - let’s c how it works. I have a spare plug as well. Wondering what the metal plug is someone referenced above
 
Anyone know the size of the drain plug off too their head? I would t mind investing Into a metal one
 
QUOTE="212s, post: 474215, member: 21731"]
As mentioned, Silicone spray lube from any auto parts store. I use it on the drain plugs and clean-out plugs. Keeps everything turning smooth and water tight. I also use it on the jetpump housings as a form of protector (don't spray the anodes) and to keep all the rubber/plastic parts lubed. Cheap and easy to use.
[/QUOTE]

I usually use white lithium as a protectant on pump etc. sticks better
 
I like to advise a silicone gasket lube rather than the spray. Why? Because most people think silicone spray and reach for WD-40 (which is petroleum based and not silicone). Now, there is a WD-40 Silicone spray that *is* silicone. How confusing is that?

But my nice little tube of gasket lube is cheaper, I can control it better, and I use it on the pool, too.
 
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