Yesterday I went out to test one final time, tiny tach in hand before I
would make the decision to take it to Watercraft Magic (where I know it
would be fixed) or attempt to troubleshoot it myself. I rode it around
and was turning about 6800 RPM. A bit low from the 7000 (Factory spec
1) figure I once had about six months ago.
Despite a few hundred RPM drop the ski did run good for about 30
minutes. Then the RPM went down to about 6200. When I hit the shore to
look inside the engine compartment, the pipe chamber body was white
(salt deposits on a hot pipe).
The chamber body was hot enough to sizzle water. Now I knew something
was really wrong. The chamber body normally gets hot enough to want to
take your hand away after holding it on there for five seconds but it
never sizzled water.
I pulled it out of the water and verified that all the cooling lines
were clear, they were. The cylinder, cylinder head and head pipe were
normal temperature. Only the pipe chamber body was hot. This made me
look at the waterbox regulator since it seems to be the only source of
water for the chamber body.
When I opened it, a bunch of water pored from it. The diaphragm came
unseated. I reseated it and blew into the regulator verifying the
normal up and down movement and it seemed to be seated well.
Reinstalled it and hit the water. 6900 RPM, still a bit low but the
speed was back……..for about 15 minutes…..then back down to 6500 RPM. I
popped open the regulator and the diaphragm was unseated again.
When I reinstalled the diaphragm it seemed to be in nice and tight. It
takes quite a bit of force by hand to pop it out.
1) Is it just worn out?
2) How much pressure should it be able to handle before it unseats?
3) Could something else within the system be causing excess pressure
build up in the waterbax causing it to unseat?
I am just asking these questions before I drop $100.00 on a new
regulator.
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<cio...@my-deja.com> wrote in message news:91iqjj$uk1$1...@nnrp1.deja.com...
> speed was back....for about 15 minutes...then back down to 6500 RPM. I
He may need to use a thin tie-wrap around the base of his diaphram to secure
it to the regulator body to keep it from coming off.
Some guys just eliminate the regulator alltogether and use hard jetting in
the pipe and in the waterbox. 120 pipe, 140 waterbox, and a plastic tee.
Bill O'Neal
WCM
Carolina Watercraft Works, Inc. wrote in message
<91irvm$vua$1...@nntp9.atl.mindspring.net>...
BTW ciocca, the majority of the water for the pipe is supplied
via the engine, through the exhaust manifold and into the top of
the head pipe.
--
Laszlo Almasi
Carolina Watercraft Works, Inc.
2104 Langdon Road
Raleigh, NC 27604
"Bill O'Neal" <water...@worldnet.att.net> wrote in message
news:6G6%5.2655$GQ1.1...@bgtnsc06-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
I have the plugs with a nice brown color doing my high spped kill the
throttle runs. The RPM only drop when that damb regulator diaphragm
pops loose. Aslo only the "Chamber Body" got hot. The head, cyclinder
case, and head pipe were normal temp. The only water the chamber body
sees is from the regulator??? correct??? By the way Bill recommended a
tie wrap??? Isn't the plastic of the regulator too hard to compress
with a tie wrap?
In article <91irvm$vua$1...@nntp9.atl.mindspring.net>,
In that case, I would look closer at your diaphragm like
you were. There is supposed to be a clamp on both ends
of the diaphragm to help keep it on. If they are gone, a tie
wrap, like Bill mentioned, should suffice.
--
Laszlo Almasi
Carolina Watercraft Works, Inc.
2104 Langdon Road
Raleigh, NC 27604
<cio...@my-deja.com> wrote in message news:91j5vc$6te$1...@nnrp1.deja.com...
As far as hard jetting is concerned, won't that pull down peak RPM
since water will always be injected into the chamber body vs being
cutoff by the regulator?
In article <91j9oj$qg1$1...@slb2.atl.mindspring.net>,
"Carolina Watercraft Works, Inc." <loba...@mindspring.com> wrote:
Lazslo, the water is injected into the inner pipe from the regulator, steam
from the water jackets has no way to travel back through the tube to the
regulator.
He is asking if it is possible for backpressures from the waterbox to cause
his regulator to unseat itself. I think he needs to squeeze the hose from
the WB to the outlet to see if it has delaminated, blocking his exhaust. I
have seen hoses that look fine, but when you actually feel them, they feel
soft and delaminated to the piont that they will block the exhaust system.
Shaking the muffler for rattling metal is a sure sign of a broken baffel,
which can be a sourse of blockage too.
Bill O'Neal
WCM
Carolina Watercraft Works, Inc. wrote in message
<91j9oj$qg1$1...@slb2.atl.mindspring.net>...
But water is also supplied to the pipe via the exhaust manifold.
--
Laszlo Almasi
Carolina Watercraft Works, Inc.
2104 Langdon Road
Raleigh, NC 27604
"Bill O'Neal" <water...@worldnet.att.net> wrote in message
news:J9d%5.2110$JH3.1...@bgtnsc07-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...