portlandbucfan
Jet Boat Addict
- Messages
- 79
- Reaction score
- 62
- Points
- 97
- Location
- Spokane, WA
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2021
- Boat Model
- 195S
- Boat Length
- 19
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How cold does it get up there?
That's why I was asking. I don't do shit to mine, besides change the oil and plugs, and put some stabil in the gas and fill it up. Blow out the water and store it in my garage, I guess I don't understand why people are obsessed with trying to winterize these machines. If they just got the boat then it's completely understandable, if not why waste your time trying to run antifreeze and fog.This is a common misconception with regular maintenance, long storage service and winterization. Folks need to not use the term Winterization as you are not Winterizing anything. You are prepping the boat for storage.
So taking that into consideration, keep in mind of how long you are planning on storing your boat, not the temp or anything else. That is why Yamaha tells us what to do based on how long it will sit. And thus the reason Yamaha does not use the term winterization, as many will feel it does not apply to them.
Stabilization of fuel is for long term storage, for us in colder climates, that will be longer. And long is a relative term. My boat may sit on the dock for two weeks, like someone in Florida. But it also may sit in my pole building for 6 months. I stabilize the fuel based on the recommendation in the manual for downtime. Fogging, is not for the cold, it's for lubrication and corrosion prevention. Don't determine what you should or should not do based on temp. Do it based on downtime.
Corrosion prevention and condensation will be effected by climate for sure. So keep that in mind when deciding if you will or will not do a bit of the recommended maintenance. And also take that advice given here based on their location as well. If I have a very cold/dry winter, I may not experience the same level of condensation or corrosion that someone with a cool humid salt air environment may have.
So I get the question, "how cold does it get" but it doesn't apply to most. We should all be draining out water from our hull, and blowing out our engines if for any other reason that's the law (again, in my state, it's the law at the landing, not someone telling me it online) And your state may/will be different. Think about what you are doing for regular maintenance for the good of the engine and boat, not what someone has done for 15 years. Understand why you would do the items listed in the manual and it will give you many reliable years on these boats.
FYI - You need to run the engine with the stabilizer in the fuel for a few minutes to make sure the stabilizer makes it through the entire fuel system. The fuel system is closed and pressurized, so you probably won't have an issue with the fuel losing volatility if you didn't run it long enough. I add stabilizer on what I figure is the last day on the water - adding it at the end of the day just before pulling up to the ramps. This gives it time to mix and get through the entire fuel system. I add some more when topping up at the gas station so the tank is fully treated.Thank you so much everyone! It gets cold in spokane, but I store in garage. I ran engine out of water (15 seconds), added fuel stabilizer, topped off fuel. I last ran it end of September and will probably use again in April. Unless people think otherwise will probably skip the fogging oil.
My dealer stores dozens of their customers Yamahas over the winter. Most are kept outside covered on the lot. I asked them about fogging the first offseason with my 2016 AR240 (1.8L engines )and they told me NEVER to fog a fuel injected engine. They don't ! Maybe if it were NOT going to be used the following spring they would advice differently ?? That never applied to me. I think that the steps @marcham outlined are sufficient.
I have a 2020 195S, I pull the plugs and spray into each cylinder, reinstall the plugs, pull the safety lanyard and crank the motor over a couple of times to distribute the fogging oil.
Oh Jesus! I didn't even think about the spray tube falling in! I will from now on! Hope that wasn't a lesson hard learned.I have the same boat and perform the same process. Just hold onto that spray tube!!
Oh Jesus! I didn't even think about the spray tube falling in! I will from now on! Hope that wasn't a lesson hard learned.