ETC-Era Pontiac Marine Engines
Transcription
ETC-Era Pontiac Marine Engines
ETC-Era Pontiac Marine Engines The seller in this recent auction provided 74 photographs of the engine and I found them to be quite interesting. I am somewhat familiar with marine engines, having been trained on a wide variety of them in the Navy. I also owned a 26’ Lyman for several years powered by an inboard Chevrolet 350 V-8 conversion from Crusader Marine. The primary changes from automobile to marine use involve the cooling system and addition of a water-cooled exhaust manifold. Since the boat is floating in an unlimited supply of water, marine engines can be water cooled without the use of an automotive type water to air radiator. This is especially true for fresh water applications. Marine engines have a “raw” water pump that brings in cooling water from under the boat. It is a centrifugal type pump with an impeller, just like an automotive water pump. It is usually mounted low, under the boat’s waterline, so the pump housing will always be full of water. If mounted above the waterline, the suction side needs a check valve so the pump does not loose its prime. The raw water pump has sufficient capacity to provide cooling water for the engine cooling system plus the exhaust manifold; any extra water is dumped into the exhaust pipe where it connects to the manifold and flows out with the exhaust. This is a one-pass system, all of the water is discharged out the engine exhaust after flowing through the engine. Arn Landvoigt brought this subject to me several years ago after having come across a Pontiac splithead 6 cylinder converted by Gray Marine for use in a 1931 Chris Craft. Gray Marine built engines for years, but began converting automobile engines in 1927. So far, Arn has identified 4 split-head six conversions from Gray; the 6-27 from 1927, the 6-40 from 1927-28, the 6-41 from 1928 and the 6-63 dating from 1931-32. Generator/starter side of Gray Marine engine, the flywheel housing is on the right. He recently sent me a link to an E-bay auction of a Kermath Sea Chief Eight, which was based upon the Pontiac straight 8. I did a bit of research and Kermath used Pontiac L-head straight sixes and eights for marine conversion, apparently under the Sea Chief name, although this name was also applied to engines from other companies as well. The raw water pump & pulley below the harmonic balancer. The hose under the generator is the suction line. The v-belt drives the generator and raw water pump, the engine water pump has no pulley and did not turn. Carburetor side, note the crankcase breather tube just in front of the carburetor flame arrestor. The fuel pump is also shown. The transmission is on the right. 8 Salt-water applications can be done the same way, but quality marine conversions will utilize some type of water to water heat exchanger because saltwater is very corrosive. Automotive engine conversions typically use a header tank system that keeps the raw water separate from engine cooling water. The engine cooling system is sealed and water circulates to the sealed side of the header tank and back again. The raw water side of the unit discharges water to the exhaust manifold for cooling. It may also have a dedicated overboard discharge pipe, if extra cooling capacity is necessary. You can barely see the raw water pump discharge line at the lower left of the balancer. The fitting on the timing cover mounts a cable to drive a tachometer. Raw water enters the exhaust manifold at the other end, at this end you can see the fittings that connect to the engine water pump. The raw water pump provides the circulation, the engine pump serves as a hose connection and directs the water into the distribution tube. The cooling water is being warmed by the exhaust before entering the engine. Knowing what a cylinder head looks like under the Pontiac thermostat housing, and noting how short this water outlet is, I doubt this engine is fitted with a thermostat. Kermath Sea Chief 8 water outlet, you can just see “outlet” by the hose nipple. Since engines are more efficient when running at operating temperature, marine conversions are fitted with one, and often two thermostats. The thermostat works just as it does in an automobile, restricting the flow of water until its design temperature is reached. During low speed or at economy cruise RPM, minimal engine heat is generated and water flow through a single thermostat is sufficient. But unlike automobiles, boats can be operated at high speeds for hours on end. In marine applications, engines are also rated for maximum continuous RPM, at these high speed and power levels much more heat is generated, whereby the second thermostat will open and increase the flow of cooling water. In applications where salt-water is actually circulating in the engine, lower temperature thermostats are used to help minimize corrosion damage. There can be another significant difference when automotive engines are adapted for marine use, especially for installation in smaller pleasure boats where the engine is under the deck. The crankshaft will be much closer to the bottom of the boat if you take power from the front (timing case) of the engine. The engine / transmission unit is narrow enough to fit deep between the stringers (hull structural members that run fore & aft, parallel to the keel). The conversion company would design its own housing to cover the timing case and mount the transmission. A coupler would be needed to connect the crankshaft to the transmission, which would possibly include a torsional damper since the original harmonic balancer was probably unsuitable. The automotive water pump could be replaced with appropriate hose connections, the raw water pump 9 would provide the necessary circulation and often the generator would be converted to a geared or chain drive on the redesigned timing case for ultimate durability. Since power is taken from the front, an enclosed flywheel housing is needed, usually fitted with rubber cushioned mounts that lag bolted on the top of adjacent stringers. The starter can be mounted high and dry, away from bilge water and accessible for service. Some conversion companies installed a pulley on the flywheel hub and mounted a belt driven generator on the housing as well. Inline engines were typically fitted with an updraft carburetor, by mounting it under the manifold a very low profile could be maintained. It was not uncommon for marine engines to have dual carburetors for increased power. A mechanical fuel pump was typical, but likely to be inverted for access to the sediment bowl and fitting connections. Crankcase ventilation was needed but the automobile road draft tube was unacceptable in the enclosed engine bay of a boat. Typically the original valve chamber (side) covers would be replaced, one fitted with an inlet breather and the other fitted with a metal outlet tube that would rest directly on the carburetor flame arrestor. Air rushing into the carburetor would create a suction on the ventilation tube and draw fumes from the crankcase. Arn and I would appreciate hearing from any of you that have additional information regarding nonautomotive applications using Pontiac engines. Thanks to this shot of the cylinder head casting number, we know this is a 1950-51 engine. The distributor, octane selector and plug wire manifold are stock Pontiac units. Note the unique oil fill tube and sealed fill cap. The bright object is the top of the fuel pump, the dirty square is the flame arrestor. The carburetor is a single barrel updraft unit. The engine water pump, casting No 511244 10 The photo at left is tilted to the left, it shows the back of the block and head. The lower left corner is an aftermarket oil filter and connecting tubing. Just to the left of where the tubing disappears is a hose and clamp, it is the raw water connection to the exhaust manifold. The large rounded piece above the hose connection has lettering on it, but even greatly enlarged I could not make any sense of it. To the left of the hose connection and lettered component is what appears to be a tube, possibly a crankcase vent from the rear side cover. Unfortunately the engine was sitting next to a wall, so there were no good photos of the carburetor side of it. The photo below was taken looking down, it shows the top of the oil filter, the exhaust pipe with a cooling water connection and the top of the transmission with engine I.D. tag and finally the starter. The bottom photo shows the starter, cables and electric solenoid switch. This starter has a Bendix drive as opposed to Delco type shift solenoid. The Kermath company was a well respected name in marine engines. They introduced the Sea Wolf series in 1926, which featured a single overhead camshaft; hemispherical, 4-valve combustion chambers; and a 12 spark plug, dual ignition system. It displaced 648 cubic inches and was rated for 150 horsepower @ 1,800 RPM. By late 1929, this engine had grown to 678 cid and 225 horsepower. The fine print on the tag recommends S.A.E 30 in summer and S.A.E. 20 in winter. The valve clearance specification was .010 on the intake and .012 for the exhaust. I would have liked to know if the Kermath serial number was the same as the number Pontiac stamped on the engine block. The Code on the tag is PEBM 7. I wonder if PEBM stood for Pontiac Engine Block Marine. We will probably never know. 11