I have recently repowered my 2004 G/W330 Express with new Yamaha F250XB outboards, replacing the original factory installed 225s. At twenty years and over 1,000 hours, the 225s had terminal corrosion problems. But I have run into a problem fitting the new outboards.
There is a tube extending from the bottom cowling on the engine, starboard side looking forward. This tube contains a grommet into which the fuel line and control cables enter the engine. The fuel line and control cables run through a flexible corrugated hose leading from the transom bulkhead that clamps to the cowling tube. This keeps the whole mess neat and tidy.
O.K. so far.
When the engines are raised (parked), the tube from the cowling is forced down into the engine well. The resulting angle breaks the clamp on the flexible hose and crushes the cables and fuel line entering the cowling tube. I lost power on one engine because of a crushed fuel line.
The solution seems to be to park the outboards in hard left rudder, which decreases the angle of the cowling tube which then eases the pressure on the fuel line and control cables. Problem then is the outboards cannot clear the swim ladder (mounted flat on the stern bulkhead in 2004).
I imagine G/W dealt with this problem on later versions of the 330, as nearly all models leave the factory with Yamaha engines. Does anyone know how the problem was addressed…?
There is a tube extending from the bottom cowling on the engine, starboard side looking forward. This tube contains a grommet into which the fuel line and control cables enter the engine. The fuel line and control cables run through a flexible corrugated hose leading from the transom bulkhead that clamps to the cowling tube. This keeps the whole mess neat and tidy.
O.K. so far.
When the engines are raised (parked), the tube from the cowling is forced down into the engine well. The resulting angle breaks the clamp on the flexible hose and crushes the cables and fuel line entering the cowling tube. I lost power on one engine because of a crushed fuel line.
The solution seems to be to park the outboards in hard left rudder, which decreases the angle of the cowling tube which then eases the pressure on the fuel line and control cables. Problem then is the outboards cannot clear the swim ladder (mounted flat on the stern bulkhead in 2004).
I imagine G/W dealt with this problem on later versions of the 330, as nearly all models leave the factory with Yamaha engines. Does anyone know how the problem was addressed…?