Welcome to Carver Yachts Owners Forum
We are a boating forum for owners of Carver Yachts to enthusiastically discuss all aspects of Carver Boat ownership. Whether you are looking for your first Carver or currently own one, you are sure to feel at home on CarverYachtOwners.com
You are currently viewing our board as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to searching the forum topics, post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!
Kohler generator overheat after coolant replacement.
-
Topic author - Deck Hand
- Posts: 53
- Joined: September 6th, 2014, 10:00 am
- Vessel Info: Carver 530
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 2 times
Kohler generator overheat after coolant replacement.
-
- Scurvy Dog
- Posts: 37
- Joined: October 3rd, 2015, 7:10 pm
- Vessel Info: 2007 Carver 41 CMY D6 370's
- Location: 1000 Islands Canada
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 3 times
Re: Kohler generator overheat after coolant replacement.
- mjk1040
- Admiral
- Posts: 1518
- Joined: July 30th, 2015, 8:15 am
- Vessel Info: 1998 355 AC/MY "Deja Vu"
- Location: Savannah, NY
- Has thanked: 9 times
- Been thanked: 242 times
Re: Kohler generator overheat after coolant replacement.
I'd Rather Be Boating!
1989 Sea Ray Seville
1986 Carver Mariner 32'
1990's Thompson 22' Cuddy Cabin
1990's 4Winns 245 Vista Cruiser
1980's Thompson 19' Open Bow
- km1125
- Admiral
- Posts: 3500
- Joined: February 28th, 2017, 6:04 pm
- Has thanked: 69 times
- Been thanked: 1043 times
Re: Kohler generator overheat after coolant replacement.
Sounds simple, or silly, but it works.
If you're refilling the system, put only enough coolant in till it gets to just above the bottom of the coolant tank. Take a vacuum (preferably a wet/dry one) and quickly hold the tube to the opening in the tank. It just takes a couple quick 'burps'. Check the coolant level. If it went down a bunch, add some and do it again. When it stops going down after you 'burp' it, then top to the correct level, put the cap on, then run the engine.
The vacuum also works great if you have work to do on the system and you want to drain all the coolant. Vacuum out the coolant reservoir, then take one of the top hoses off and vacuum the remaining coolant though that hose.
Return to “Gas Engines/Transmissions”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 48 guests