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First time getting debris in the impeller 4 times on Sunday. 2 were bad with a stick stuck between the impeller and the housing any chance this did damage?
Among other things, we sucked up Dorito's bags, a cut tip of a 2x4, a smashed qt. oil bottle, countless sticks...like @ar240owner said, the only time we did damage to the impeller was when we sucked up some rocks.
We boat on Lake Chelan in Washington State. The lake has a lot of logging debris in it including some pretty big logs. But what get's you is the small water-logged wood chips. We sometimes get them stuck between the impeller and the housing and they cause a horrible rattle. We haven't seen any damage, but they can be a bear to remove.
We boat on Lake Chelan in Washington State. The lake has a lot of logging debris in it including some pretty big logs. But what get's you is the small water-logged wood chips. We sometimes get them stuck between the impeller and the housing and they cause a horrible rattle. We haven't seen any damage, but they can be a bear to remove.
That's exactly what I sucked up, impossible to remove by hand, had to free it by hitting the the throttle hard a few times, is that the method you have used?
It really depends on how it gets sucked up as much as what it is. My lone issue with debris hosing the impeller was when a relatively small chunk of wood got lodged in there. It was maybe a 1" x 0.5" piece of a branch. But it got wedged in there just right and locked up the impeller. We tried to clear it through the ports but it was not budging. Blasting the throttle a few times cleared it. Probably not the best way to do it, but that's what we did.
I've sucked up capri sun containers, zip locks bags, I even sucked up a kite one time....yea the whole kite...wood frame, material and some string. I boat on Lake Erie and small twigs or small wood pieces are normal.
Lots of beautiful pine trees on the canals that lead to our place. But then there's the crappy pine needles and, worse than that, pine cones - which are surprisingly sharp when you try to get them out of the impeller. I keep a set of mechanic's gloves on the boat for a bit of protection from the sharp bits.
I know the pine cones have actually added a few chips to the impellers. And then the pine cones trap needles in bunches which has caused an overheat warning a couple of times... much more worried about that than impeller damage. In any case, thankful for cleanout plugs - saved the day a few times. Keep something like a Leatherman tool, long needle nose pliers, sharp (preferably floating) knife...