WREKS
Jetboaters Lieutenant
- Messages
- 1,167
- Reaction score
- 474
- Points
- 167
- Location
- Port Saint Lucie, Florida
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2007
- Boat Model
- SX
- Boat Length
- 23
I would highly doubt that higher pressure from cooling water would cause that kind of damage. Even 200psi water won't do that to aluminum. That looks like a cavitation or aeration burn. Possibly carbon deposits along the cylinder/head interface getting very hot and essentially creating a localized boiling point that, over time, shows the same erosion as cavitation.
There are other possibilities as well. Additional pressure is accompanied by additional velocity when looking at fluid flow through a given area. Localized accelerations of fluid could lead to erosion of the metal of very long periods of exposure, assuming there was something in the water to make it abrasive (sand, or other suck grit). This is the same concept as a water jet cutter. High pressure differential is used to accelerate water with cutting agents across the surface of a material to cut it. I could see that possibly being the case here, however the material removal appears to be non-uniform, and extremely localized. "waterjet" type erosion would more typically show as overall thinning of the walls, and not nearly as pinpoint as what is shown here.
Pressure alone won't hurt the gaskets. Combustion pressures are significantly higher, orders of magnitude, higher than cooling water pressures. The pressure must be combined with increased flow velocity to erode the metal like that. i.e. the valves are most likely NOT the cause of that sort of erosion. I would suspect bad luck with an imperfect casting in that area is more likely.
Thanks, Beachbummer! Sorry for the slow response. I was looking for a photo of the head gasket. I will go with the "localized boiling point" because where this infraction took place was where the cylinder water jackets were the most clogged. That is around Cylinder#1, the farthest from the cooling water input to the cylinder block. BTW, The return from the cylinder block is located directly above the input so in order to flush collected debris from the water jacket around cylinder#1, the water must either go back to just above where it came into the cylinder block, or up through the head gasket into the cylinder head. The holes in the head gasket act like a dead head. They are so small, not like the water passageways on either side of the gasket. At first it looks like large openings. That is where sediment collected on either side of the gasket. I do not see how ingested sand and sediment can be flushed out of the water jackets. Thus debris builds up and leads to overheat issues. While running my starboard engine on the hose the temp around Cylinder #1 was above boiling when my boat slumped into low idle