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Going on vacation to the Fl. Keys for 8 weeks and my new 210 FSH will be in salt water the whole time, is there any way of flushing the motors while the boat is in the water?
8 weeks is a long time to keep the boat in salt water. Even if you were to flush with the boat in the water, all jet compontens would be under water. I have done vacations in the keys and kept the boat in water for 3-4days at a time and then flush with salt-away afterwards. Some of the guys here have done week trips to Bimini.
You may have to pull in the boat to this maybe after a week or 2 to do a complete flush with saltaway or other product, just my 2 cents.
After a week marine growth will be a factor on the hull. you may have to take a blue sponge/cleaning pad to attack once a week so it does not stick super hard. At 8 weeks with no cleaning you will likely even have barnacles growing.
Salt Away insists it is not harmful to the environment. "Salt-away is water based, non-hazardous, biodegradable, and contains properties that attack and remove salt from any surface."
As others have mentioned, the next time I'm in saltwater, I'll take the boat out and rinse it daily, including 5 minutes per engine, rinsed jets, trailer and wheels, etc. But the above will help your engine.
8 weeks is a long time to keep the boat in salt water. Even if you were to flush with the boat in the water, all jet compontens would be under water. I have done vacations in the keys and kept the boat in water for 3-4days at a time and then flush with salt-away afterwards. Some of the guys here have done week trips to Bimini.
You may have to pull in the boat to this maybe after a week or 2 to do a complete flush with saltaway or other product, just my 2 cents.
Put one of these on each of your intake lines and close while flushing will not pump salt water through while flushing, just put one on my 190 and just got back from marathon today, kept boat in water for 6 days flushed every evening with this method
View attachment 74995 Put one of these on each of your intake lines and close while flushing will not pump salt water through while flushing, just put one on my 190 and just got back from marathon today, kept boat in water for 6 days flushed every evening with this method
I installed intake water filters on my 210 fsh, but that's not easy. It took special connectors and additional hose. If your leaving soon, I'd go with using the hose flush connection. If you have time and want the installation detail let me know.
Look up Wave Eater valve Yamaha 4-stroke on Ebay… That's where I got mine.. it is installed on intake hose under the cleanout tray under the exhaust piping.. in location where it is hard to photograph since I put the cleanout tray back after install. took 30 minutes to install.. now I just have to reach through the access cover below the exhaust to shut off the valve
Island racing sells them too (their website sucks) - about half way down on the page I linked to
ISLAND RACING TOW VALVE KIT IR-TVK-58 $24.95
Our Tow Valves bodies are 450 PSI plated brass construction. Full flow inner diameter doesn't restrict cooling water. During towing situations or running on one engine, it's mandatory to shut off the inlet water hose of the downed engine to prevent damage. ( One per engine required )
Thank you all for the awesome information, now I just have to decide which method is more suitable for my limited mechanical skills. I am definitely going to be installing a shutoff valve either under the intake plate or inside the engine compartment by the intake Y not sure which of the two, since we will be leaving next week and I have limited time and skills I think I am going to take the temporary solution with the vice hose pinch pliers and then make a permanent install when we get back in August. Just a quick question from all of you to make sure I am on the right track (this is my first jet pump boat), once I shut off or clamp off, the inflow from the intake stops and only the fresh water from the flush port/hose is what runs thru the engine correct?
Correct. The only way the boat intakes water for engine/exhaust cooling is via the intake grate in each pump. Some will naturally stand in the exhaust but doesn't flow in there.
If I was going to be in the water 8 weeks, I'd pull the boat after 2 weeks to see how bad the build up is getting and then repeat as desired. You don't want to be dealing with barnacles if you can avoid it. A good wax job in advance will help alot to. As well as protectant spray on the engines/pumps
With this system when I was in saltwater I would unscrew the filter container, fill it with Salt Away, and start the engine until I saw foam coming out the back of the boat. I did not close the valve, just stopped the engine before all the Salt Away was run out.
When I had the FSH I left it in the water for 2 weeks and I had small barnacles growing on the entire hull. DO NOT leave yours in the water for 8 weeks!
Yeah, had my 190 in the water for a week in Englewood. Took me 6 hours laying on my back scrubbing the hull after I got back. Id take it out weekly to a carwash and pressure wash the hull.