A vendor I met at the Seattle boat show told me that the life expectancy for
engine mounts was 10 years.
I have 30 years on mine and they seem to be solid with no signs of
misalignment (temp in the bearings).
What is the list wisdom on this?
Richard
Richard, A vendor has a vested and financial interest in getting boaters to
replace parts so keep that in mind any time you get advice from one. Now
having said that there is a bit of truth to what he says. Engine mounts with
"rubber" inserts can look perfectly fine but the "rubber" can be degrading and
separating from the metal. After 30 years you might consider replacements but
without a inspection it is hard to give a definitive answer. Misalignment
would not necessarily be a symptom of mount failure or reason to feel it would
not fail. . Chuck
To follow our adventures, go to
http://trawler-beach-house.blogspot.com/
--- On Tue, 2/3/09, Richard Tomkinson capnrich@wavecable.com wrote:
A vendor I met at the Seattle boat show told me that the life expectancy for
engine mounts was 10 years.
I have 30 years on mine and they seem to be solid with no signs of
misalignment (temp in the bearings).
What is the list wisdom on this?
Richard
"Richard Tomkinson" capnrich@wavecable.com writes:
A vendor I met at the Seattle boat show told me that the life expectancy for
engine mounts was 10 years.
I have 30 years on mine and they seem to be solid with no signs of
misalignment (temp in the bearings).
Are you sure they are floating (rubber) engine mounts? It's the rubber that
fails. However many engines (especially older ones) were rigidly mounted.
Mine are solid cast iron, bolted to 10" X 18" X 40 foot engine beds. They
have lasted 45 years, I don't think that they will fail any time soon :-)
Scott Welch
Product Manager, Open Text Collaboration Solutions Group
www.firstclass.com
"Things turn out best for people who make the best of the way things turn
out." - John Wooden