Let's wrap this up.
Thought I was all done, ready for paint when last we spoke. I could not get Rustoleum gloss black paint from Home Despot to cover, stick, dry, turn black, or do graffiti. I will be using Krylon from here on out. I did have a partial can of Hammerite which I knew would cover the usual multitude of sins. Two or three coats later, even over half cured black putrid swill. Done.
The combustion chamber, once I removed the blower, was encrusted with soot and carbon. Somewhere I read about burning it out with an acetylene torch, but CAREFULLY... Fortunately I only have Mapp gas and I knew enough to stop when I detected burning rubber. O-rings. Almost an oops.
Just below the intake vortex
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is where the fuel enters through the glow plug. This area was especially carboned up and the torch loosened it up pretty good. I scratched around with an awl and screwdrivers to remove as much as I could then I noticed some sort of lighter colored layer starting to show up. Thinking it was asbestos, I quit scraping and took a break to finish my last will and testament. When I came back, a closer look revealed some sort of screen material wrapped around the inside of that initial part of the combustion chamber. A little more poking and prodding began to loosen up a bunch more carbon, more like gray ash revealing that, sure enough, that screen used to wrap the whole portion. Ever notice how brightly screen glows in any kind of fire? Well that is how the diesel is supposed to ignite once the unit gets going and the glow plug is turned off. So I kept poking loosening up and removing as much crud as I could reach around what remained of the screen. No asbestos after all.
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Then I rewired the whole thing to match the somewhat official Eberspacher schematics that came with the boat. I eliminated the extra relay that didn't do anything, there were plenty of contacts on the other one, crimped new connectors, added an on/off switch, fuel interruptus push button, and proper operation green lamp.
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I wanted to re-route the ducting that serves the aft cabin storage area to provide heat to the helm area. I managed to snake the whole length without cutting so aft cabin heat can be restored later easily.
This is one of those projects you don't want to drag out, mainly so you don't lose all the little parts and pieces and forget how it is supposed to go back together. Best part was no fuel leakage at any connections, first time. Then bleed the system and fire it up. (First, make sure the winter tarp is not laying against the exhaust outlet...trust me.)
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Controls are inconspicuous enough and not easy to inadvertently operate.
Always measure twice and redo the whole thing when you screw up.
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All in all, this was a great project. We'll see how well it works. I am concerned about the fuel system losing its prime, but that is not that big a deal. It's just that you can't override the little dosing pump and the doses are small. I also decided to include the fuel delivery interrupt switch which lets the glowplug heat up even though I was able to clean out a lot of crud which was contributing to slow ignition. The hot glow screen inside the unit is largely missing and that would be huge in improving initial combustion, though it is not bad now. We'll see how long it continues to work.
In reality, I didn't do that much, other than clean everything up, repaint, tear it all apart so now I know EXACTLY how it works. Trouble is, with only a few days use per year, there is a very good chance I'll forget it all when I may need to troubleshoot later. I kept good notes though, and now it matches the original schematics.
I still have a lot of engine heat going to waste. (But I have an ancient 5 gallon dual coil water heater laying in the shop. It even has a 120V element! Maybe next year...)
Thanks for all your advice and encouragement, to say nothing of the usual thread drifting comments! I appreciate it all, especially the humor.
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