Sean
Well-Known Member
So my Mercruiser has 4 external braided lines for the trim cylinders. This summer I developed a leak on one and had all of them replaced. Water had invaded the system and the fluid looked like a "chocolate milkshake". We flushed the system, installed new fluid and ran it up and down a few times to bleed it. The system is supposed to be self bleeding.
The next run, I temporarily lost the ability to adjust trim or lift the drive. I figured air in the system... after a while the trim returned (thankfully before I got to the ramp).
While on the trailer I noticed overnight the drive was lower than I normally leave it (fully up). So I just put it back up. This happened several days in a row. I drove the boat again but, this time stored it at a friends farm. I hadn`t been back for 2 weeks and upon my return the drive leg was fully distended to the ground.
I see no evidence of the contaminated fluid.
1). Can there still be an air pocket
2). Could flushing the trim pump have damaged one of the valves
3). Are these truly self bleeding or is there another procedure
The next run, I temporarily lost the ability to adjust trim or lift the drive. I figured air in the system... after a while the trim returned (thankfully before I got to the ramp).
While on the trailer I noticed overnight the drive was lower than I normally leave it (fully up). So I just put it back up. This happened several days in a row. I drove the boat again but, this time stored it at a friends farm. I hadn`t been back for 2 weeks and upon my return the drive leg was fully distended to the ground.
I see no evidence of the contaminated fluid.
1). Can there still be an air pocket
2). Could flushing the trim pump have damaged one of the valves
3). Are these truly self bleeding or is there another procedure