8.1 manifolds replacement question

liv2ryde100

Active Member
May 17, 2012
894
long island
Boat Info
07' 40 sundancer
Engines
cummins 5.9 380's
hey I know I’ve been asking a lot of questions on here about manifold replacement, and thanks for all the help from everyone. Just a couple more questions about the step by step...
When I drain the manifolds before removing, will any antifreeze be coming out or just sea water? Seems like just seawater but wanna be sure I have everything for the job before I start.
Also is there any other step by step I should be following? Thanks
 
Is there a water rail on the manifold? I see it in a shop manual but I don’t hear anyone talk about it, I know I don’t have risers so that’s good
 
Okay here's the deal on 8.1s. 2001 to about 2003 had aluminum manifolds with aluminum water rails below them. The screwed on drain coupler to the rail was stainless. That drain point was the achelies heal the entire set up in saltwater application. Best you'd get is one year literally then the joint just blew apart from corrosion.

Next was the manifold. Maybe two years in salt if you got lucky. The riser or elbow is stainless so no issues there.

There is a cast iron kit that supersedes the water rail version. That manifold has a built in drain with a cast coupler drain. No issues there now.

There is no way for raw water to get from the elbow / manifold to block. Hence dry joint via the two water hoses on both sides of the elbow. Chances of the stainless elbow to fail is near zero. However, cast manifolds get about 5 to 6 years in salt. Atlantic salt maybe slightly less and Nw pacific salt maybe slightly more.
Between the elbow and riser is a gasket. It's called a tubilator. It's an inverted cone that catches condensation in the elbow so it won't drip into the cylinders. What does get caught gets blown out as soon as you start your engine.

After you replace the new equipment and tourqe to spec. Re-tourqe after several hot runs. Including the elbows.

Fyi the 496 8.1S do not have zincs in the cooling system because the manifolds drain hence there is no seawater to zinc. Example: After about an hour with the engine off, if you pull the caps off the heat exchanger or pull your cooler hoses off you'll only find drips of water. Where did the water drain.... out of the dripless around your shaft and out... ever wonder why it takes so long for water to exit the side exhaust at first start. The system has to refill all the coolers hoses and manifolds first.

Hope this helps.

8.1S 2001 lived it learned it.
Mark
 
Hope this helps.

Mark:

Excellent description!

+1 on the Aluminum Manifolds - from my research I found that any boater going from fresh to salt needs to verify that the manifolds are not aluminum or are 100% likely to experience problems if not swapped out soon.

-Kevin
 
Thanks guys for all the details, my parts are Salk ordered up for the job, I’m supposed to bring the boat home Saturday and start working next week on this. Just waiting for my Kroil oil to get delivered!!
 
How do I re route the water line for the shafts? Do I pull the brass plug on the new manifold? What fitting do I buy to put in there?
 
Yes pull the plug and use on new manifold.
 
So pull the brass plug out of new manifold? It’s at the other end of the motor does that matter? Also it doesn’t look like the fitting in old manifold is a direct swap. Kind of looks like a different size but I’m not totally sure yet
 
There is no way for raw water to get from the elbow / manifold to block. Hence dry joint via the two water hoses on both sides of the elbow. Chances of the stainless elbow to fail is near zero. However, cast manifolds get about 5 to 6 years in salt. Atlantic salt maybe slightly less and Nw pacific salt maybe slightly more.

That's what I thought, but a friend (mistercomputerman, on CSR) had this happen on both engines (ie: elbows fail). I had never ever heard of this happening, but I have now. The rest of his hardware was all new about 4 seasons ago. He boats out of Virginia Beach (very salty).
 
One note about the dripless...I had a dripless fail b/c it melted from heat when the tiny little brass elbow that exits the exhaust manifold got crudded up with rust chips. I bought this kit from Tides, put a plug in that exhaust manifold and tapped into the hose to get water for the dripless - both engines.

The orefice in that brass elbow that comes off the manifold is tiny, and it's a 90* turn. Way too easy to get occluded.

https://www.tidesmarine.com/ws/index.php?route=product/category&path=22_24
 
We have our boat in salt water/brackish water on the Atlantic side. We bought it from the Gulf of Mexico side where the water is more salty. We just replaced a SS elbow that was corroded. It happens.
 
There is no way for raw water to get from the elbow / manifold to block. Hence dry joint via the two water hoses on both sides of the elbow. Chances of the stainless elbow to fail is near zero. However, cast manifolds get about 5 to 6 years in salt. Atlantic salt maybe slightly less and Nw pacific salt maybe slightly more.

That's what I thought, but a friend (mistercomputerman, on CSR) had this happen on both engines (ie: elbows fail). I had never ever heard of this happening, but I have now. The rest of his hardware was all new about 4 seasons ago. He boats out of Virginia Beach (very salty).


Two stainless steel elbows out of 4 (one on each motor) are leaking water into the exhaust manifolds. This causes rust in the manifold, rust on any of the exhaust valves and valves seats that the sea water gets to, salt buildup on the spark plug and maybe a slight hunting of 20 - 40 rpms in the engine when running (which you will probably not see with an analog tach), and maybe some evidence of seepage around the "dry joint" turbolator gasket, provided you catch it early enough.

Otherwise, you hydrolock the engine and at best, bend a rod, or at worst throw the rod through the block.

Rule #1:
A exhaust dry joint is just that...a DRY joint. If there is ANY evidence of seepage around a dry joint, do not run the motor until you figure it out. It is most likely a corroded turbolator gasket (which is in the joint to cook off excess moisture/condensation in the exhaust-it does not help with an elbow leak) or a leaking elbow.

In order to repair this, you have the following expenses:

4 exhaust manifold about $2500
4 elbows about $3000
4 heads to the machine shop about $1000
4 sets of head bolts and gaskets about $1000
5 or so days worth of labor about $1000
miscellaneous whatthehellever about $1000
two new trans and 2 new oil coolers about $800

Anyone add all this up yet??????

These are 2009 Merc 8.1 motors. I changed the manifolds 4 years ago, but, did not change the stainless steel elbows. That was a mistake. Spending the $3k then would have saved me the extra $8k I am spending now, because the manifolds would not have been all rusted up and the elbows would only be halfway through their useful life and not leaking.

Live and learn... Your mileage may vary.

PS. If something on your boat fails and you have others like it, those others are about to fail as well. Bite the bullet, pull the trigger, spend the money and replace all of the similar components....just sayin'
 
Okay here's the deal on 8.1s. 2001 to about 2003 had aluminum manifolds with aluminum water rails below them. The screwed on drain coupler to the rail was stainless. That drain point was the achelies heal the entire set up in saltwater application. Best you'd get is one year literally then the joint just blew apart from corrosion.

Next was the manifold. Maybe two years in salt if you got lucky. The riser or elbow is stainless so no issues there.

There is a cast iron kit that supersedes the water rail version. That manifold has a built in drain with a cast coupler drain. No issues there now.

There is no way for raw water to get from the elbow / manifold to block. Hence dry joint via the two water hoses on both sides of the elbow. Chances of the stainless elbow to fail is near zero. However, cast manifolds get about 5 to 6 years in salt. Atlantic salt maybe slightly less and Nw pacific salt maybe slightly more.
Between the elbow and riser is a gasket. It's called a tubilator. It's an inverted cone that catches condensation in the elbow so it won't drip into the cylinders. What does get caught gets blown out as soon as you start your engine.

After you replace the new equipment and tourqe to spec. Re-tourqe after several hot runs. Including the elbows.

Fyi the 496 8.1S do not have zincs in the cooling system because the manifolds drain hence there is no seawater to zinc. Example: After about an hour with the engine off, if you pull the caps off the heat exchanger or pull your cooler hoses off you'll only find drips of water. Where did the water drain.... out of the dripless around your shaft and out... ever wonder why it takes so long for water to exit the side exhaust at first start. The system has to refill all the coolers hoses and manifolds first.

Hope this helps.

8.1S 2001 lived it learned it.
Mark
Two stainless steel elbows out of 4 (one on each motor) are leaking water into the exhaust manifolds. This causes rust in the manifold, rust on any of the exhaust valves and valves seats that the sea water gets to, salt buildup on the spark plug and maybe a slight hunting of 20 - 40 rpms in the engine when running (which you will probably not see with an analog tach), and maybe some evidence of seepage around the "dry joint" turbolator gasket, provided you catch it early enough.

Otherwise, you hydrolock the engine and at best, bend a rod, or at worst throw the rod through the block.

Rule #1:
A exhaust dry joint is just that...a DRY joint. If there is ANY evidence of seepage around a dry joint, do not run the motor until you figure it out. It is most likely a corroded turbolator gasket (which is in the joint to cook off excess moisture/condensation in the exhaust-it does not help with an elbow leak) or a leaking elbow.

In order to repair this, you have the following expenses:

4 exhaust manifold about $2500
4 elbows about $3000
4 heads to the machine shop about $1000
4 sets of head bolts and gaskets about $1000
5 or so days worth of labor about $1000
miscellaneous whatthehellever about $1000
two new trans and 2 new oil coolers about $800

Anyone add all this up yet??????

These are 2009 Merc 8.1 motors. I changed the manifolds 4 years ago, but, did not change the stainless steel elbows. That was a mistake. Spending the $3k then would have saved me the extra $8k I am spending now, because the manifolds would not have been all rusted up and the elbows would only be halfway through their useful life and not leaking.

Live and learn... Your mileage may vary.

PS. If something on your boat fails and you have others like it, those others are about to fail as well. Bite the bullet, pull the trigger, spend the money and replace all of the similar components....just sayin'
 
I currently have both motors in pieces, swapping 4 manifolds and 4 elbows. It’s going pretty well, I broke one bolt out of all 32 so that’s pretty good. Hopefully I’ll have the job done by the end of the week
 
PS. If something on your boat fails and you have others like it, those others are about to fail as well. Bite the bullet, pull the trigger, spend the money and replace all of the similar components....just sayin'

The guy that owns my boat yard always tells me the same thing. No. 1 reason I'm happy with a single engine and have a hard time upgrading to anything larger.
 
Mistercomputerman I owe you a HUGE thank you for your post and the detailed description on the rpm hunting!!!!! About 6 weeks ago my starboard engine started hunting 10 to 20 RPM around 650 rpm. You could not hear it nor did it show on my analog gauge. But my Vessel View mobile pick it right up!! I thought it was the IAC. Or the new crank shaft sensor.

Several weeks back I noticed a white line on the back side manifold. Figured it was condensation leaking from a failing tubilator since the humidity had been so high with the change in season. I didnt think twice since most of the moisture was gone over the past few weeks. I read your post and thought that's It! I pulled the riser today and brought it home. Filled it with water to the hoses. Sat it on a paper towel for three hours. When I checked it, the towel had a quarter size wet spot. And there it was a very fine crack on the inside rim weld.
Ordered a new riser today. Spoke to a mechanic about the hunting. He said Yup, the hunting is due to moisture getting on the spark plug and interruting the spark. Once the few drops are burned off the hunting stops. That was mine. After a high rpm and going to 650 rpm, the tubilator over flowed until the small amount of water burned down and the pressure was low enough that the crack only weeped.
Also the tubilator was not as bad looking as the pictures above but mine did have rust on both sides of the cone. I did a spot check on one suspicious riser on the other engine. All good on that one!

Thank you again!!

Mark
 
i finally finished my manifold and elbow replacement last night. woof. came out good no leaks, thanks everyone for all the help
 
Good news!
Luckily you haven't missed anything.....how many consecutive days can it rain ?!?!?!?!
 

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