First off, I'm new here and want to thank everyone for sharing valuable information. This is a great resource.
Below is a picture of the hose nipple which connects to the bottom part of the coolant hose on an 06 Yamaha F150TXR. While this looks bad, the part is only $28. I'm more concerned about what I can't see internally. I flush my engines religiously with the hose connector (not running), but the water pressure at my dock is poor, therefore the engine doesn't pee when it's being flushed. I've heard that if an engine doesn't pee when being flushed, no big deal, but there's a lot of opinions out there on that. Does the corrosion on the hose nipple indicate potential corrosion problems inside the engine as well? Also, I'm researching, but what's the level of effort required to change the hose nipple out? I have twin engines and both of them have the same amount of corrosion on the coolant hose nipples.
Thanks in advance.
Below is a picture of the hose nipple which connects to the bottom part of the coolant hose on an 06 Yamaha F150TXR. While this looks bad, the part is only $28. I'm more concerned about what I can't see internally. I flush my engines religiously with the hose connector (not running), but the water pressure at my dock is poor, therefore the engine doesn't pee when it's being flushed. I've heard that if an engine doesn't pee when being flushed, no big deal, but there's a lot of opinions out there on that. Does the corrosion on the hose nipple indicate potential corrosion problems inside the engine as well? Also, I'm researching, but what's the level of effort required to change the hose nipple out? I have twin engines and both of them have the same amount of corrosion on the coolant hose nipples.
Thanks in advance.
Comment