My S150TXRV 97 Yamaha 150 2 stroke has been overheating at high RPMs.
I can run it no problem under 4200 RPM but as soon as I go higher it begins to overheat (the alarm comes on and power is cut until it cools off). It appears to be the port head that is overheating since it is the port heat sensor which is closing.
I opened up the thermostat housings, cleaned out the gook, removed the thermostats altogether: No change.
I dropped the lower unit and changed the impeller. I also circulated 5% vinegar through midsection water pipe for about an hour: no change.
I tested the 2 head heat sensors with hot water and an ohm meter on the kitchen stove. They closed around 185F or so and opened back up around 145-150F so I believe these are working correctly.
The poppet valve (pressure relief valve) is seized shut, and I am trying to understand whether the poppet valve actually contributes to additional cooling of the motor at high speed, or is its function to simply relieve pressure? It would help if I understood which port the impeller water enters on the underside of the power head - does it enter the exhaust cover cavity first? Or does it enter somewhere else first? I've asked that question in another post but unfortunately have not received an answer, and it is not in the book.
Since the port head is triggering the overheat, as far as coolant flow, are there additional "turns" that the cooling water has to run through before getting to the port head, vs. the starboard head? I ask this short of pulling the heads because I don't know what else to do next.
Thank you.
I can run it no problem under 4200 RPM but as soon as I go higher it begins to overheat (the alarm comes on and power is cut until it cools off). It appears to be the port head that is overheating since it is the port heat sensor which is closing.
I opened up the thermostat housings, cleaned out the gook, removed the thermostats altogether: No change.
I dropped the lower unit and changed the impeller. I also circulated 5% vinegar through midsection water pipe for about an hour: no change.
I tested the 2 head heat sensors with hot water and an ohm meter on the kitchen stove. They closed around 185F or so and opened back up around 145-150F so I believe these are working correctly.
The poppet valve (pressure relief valve) is seized shut, and I am trying to understand whether the poppet valve actually contributes to additional cooling of the motor at high speed, or is its function to simply relieve pressure? It would help if I understood which port the impeller water enters on the underside of the power head - does it enter the exhaust cover cavity first? Or does it enter somewhere else first? I've asked that question in another post but unfortunately have not received an answer, and it is not in the book.
Since the port head is triggering the overheat, as far as coolant flow, are there additional "turns" that the cooling water has to run through before getting to the port head, vs. the starboard head? I ask this short of pulling the heads because I don't know what else to do next.
Thank you.
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