1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: The Starboard Engine Runs!

I’ve been super busy with other things and haven’t had time to post updates here. I hope to get back into regular posting before long.

Despite the lack of posts here, I have been making progress on the refit. If things go as planned, I’ll begin dismantling Tent Model XXX the first week of June 2023 and splash the boat once I get the green light from my surveyor and insurance company. I’ve decided to keep the boat in a slip at the current marina for a month and will be making sure all necessary systems are 100% before taking off and heading to the marina closest to my home. It’ll be a 15 minute hop on country roads to go mess with the boat instead of the hour+ slog in awful Swamp-zone traffic that I’ve been doing since 2012.

Anyway, I posted my first attempt at getting the engines running last fall. The big news for today is that I recently resolved some problems I was having with the starboard engine, which I’ll cover in a future post, and got it running. It was 52°F overnight, so the engine room was cool when I first tried to start it. I installed oil pan heaters years ago but haven’t been using them, so the engine was at ambient temp. After two attempts cranking the starter for 10 seconds, it lit off on the third try but had a loping idle. The video below was the fourth start, and it jumped to life. Idle is rock-solid and the throttle behaves as it should.

Click “Cancel” after the video ends, or it will autoplay whatever video Rumble is promoting.

Stay tuned! I’ll post more (hopefully) soon.

Next up in our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: Fuel System Fixes

1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: Making the Chris Craft Cable Drive Tachometers Work with Cummins 6-CTAs

Like all Chris Craft motoryachts in the late 1960s, my Roamer came with cable-drive tachometers. This boat was originally powered with gas 427 Ford engines with a 4,000 rpm WOT, so the tachs went to 5,000. Since I repowered to Cummins 6CTAs (2,600 WOT), I had the tachs recalibrated to 4,000rpm max when I had Kucian Instruments restore all of my original gauges.

When people repower these old boats, it’s typical to swap over to new gauges or even fully electronic touchpad readouts. I had the cable drive tachs restored because I like the classic look. Also, by happy coincidence, the Cummins engines I bought came with tach cable drives running off the injection pumps…or so I thought.

With my plan to splash the boat and relocate it in October 2022, having functioning tachometers is one of many priorities of mine.

The original tachometers, restored to new condition

OEM tach cable connects to the Cummins tach drive

The good news is, the cable fits the drive and it’s long enough. The bad news is that Chris Craft’s cable core has a square-drive end and it’s recessed inside the cable housing. The Cummins drive requires a keyed shaft drive, not square drive, AND it’s also recessed inside the drive. So the cable attaches to the drive, but there’s no way for the drive to turn the cable core.

Tach cable core is recessed 1/2″ inside the housing

I pulled off the starboard tach drive to get a better look at things

There’s a drive hub very loosely attached to the starboard engine injector pump

I could wiggle it around very easily. This doesn’t look good. It looked like I’d have to remove the whole front cover to see why the drive hub was loose.

I checked the port side to see how the hub was attached there

Houston…we have a problem

There was no tach drive hub on the port side. But I could look inside the hole where it should have been and see the injector pump shaft, gear, and the bolt that holds the gear to the shaft.

After staring at the front cover for a while, I decided Cummins couldn’t have been so stupid as to make the injector pump bolt visible but inaccessible without taking off the front cover. Turns out my guess was right. The round thing the tach drive attaches to is a cap that was threaded on to the front cover. I put the two tach drive attachment bolts back in, then used a wrench to twist off the cap.

A 10mm wrench between the two bolts gave me the leverage to remove the front cover cap

Voila!

Cummins tach drive hub

The body is plastic. The shaft is steel.

The part number is/was 3907757

So, the hub just sits on the injector pump bolt. It relies on the drive gear housing to hold the shaft end in place. So being loose when I removed the drive housing was perfectly normal.

I spent three weeks looking online for the drive hub. Needless to say, cable drive tachometers aren’t common anymore, and it appears Cummins may have stopped making these things a while back. Lots of Cummins part sellers have this part number on their online stores, but they were all out of stock.

I finally found a place with the hub in stock: mddistributors.com. Around the same time, I found some very short cable adapters at isspro.com that looked like they could bridge the gap between my OEM cable core and the tach drive output.

It’s always exciting when rare parts show up

Square-to-keyed cable adapters from Isspro

Looks good!

I wanted to test the setup before putting it all back together.

Drill with the trigger taped at a low speed

If I took video, the blooper reel for this test would have been extensive. I finally got the drill to stay in place and stay on long enough for me to run up to the helm and eyeball the tachometer.

Rock solid needle at ~600rpm

I referred to these tachometers as ‘clickers’ before because all of them I’ve ever seen made clicking sounds when operating. These Kucian-restored units are dead quiet.

I greased everything up and put the tach drives back on

Tef-Gel protects the aluminum drive threads from the steel cable nut

Port tach drive cable is hooked up

I routed the cables so there are no tight turns

That’s one long, loopy cable

Port side is done

Starboard tach drive cable is done

It took easily three times as much time to locate the parts as it did to install them. I hope I never have to do that again.

Next up in our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit:  Installing Throttle Cables & Accusync Engine Synchronizer

1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: Bending & Installing Stainless Fuel Supply Tubing

The fuel system is coming along nicely. I’ll be wrapping it up soon. The fuel filters and on-engine hoses and fittings are installed, as is the fuel supply distribution manifold, and the fuel gauge is working. I also bent and installed 304 stainless return line tubing. Next up is the supply tubing.

The starboard on-engine fuel supply hose connects directly to the distribution manifold, so I only need to make one long tubing section to feed the port engine. I also need to connect the bulkhead supply fittings to the fuel filter inlets for both sides.

The supply tubing is 1/2″ OD 304 stainless

It turns out 1/2″ SS tubing is much harder to work with than 3/8″.

My 1/2″ tubing bender isn’t Swagelok

This 1/2″ tubing bender isn’t bad. But it uses a solid, hardened die to make the bends instead of the hardened steel wheels my 3/8″ Swagelok bender uses. So, obviously, any problems I had bending the 1/2″ tubing was entirely the fault of the tool. 😉

That looks about right

Most bends I’ve had to do involve just two axes. You make a 90° bend from horizontal to vertical, for example. But this section of tubing has a single bend that involved the X, Y, and Z axes…it was very difficult to make. As I said before, doing this has given me great respect for the guys who work with stainless tubing regularly.

I decided to tackle the short bulkhead tubing next

When I installed the bulkhead fittings a few years ago, I bent some 1/2″ tubing that you can see above. It was long enough to reach the port engine fuel filter inlet, but just barely. And I didn’t like the long 45° angle the tube had to take to go from the bulkhead to the filter inlet.

New tube connects the bulkhead fitting to the port fuel filter inlet

I put TefGel on the threads before locking down the Swagelok tube-to-NPT connector

You can see the Sharpie marks on the Swagelok fitting. They’re offset by 1/4 turn, which tells me I put the nut on hand tight, marked straight across with a Sharpie, then used a wrench to rotate the nut 1-1/4 turns. That’s the recommended procedure for making these fittings liquid-tight.

Next, I installed the engine supply tube

In the pic above you can see it attached to the 90° fitting at the top of the manifold. Then it drops down to the stringer and meets the bulkhead before crossing to the outboard stringer.

I had to do some adjusting to get the tube in just the right spot

I have to say, one thing I really like about this boat is the excellent access I have to the propeller shaft behind the engine and gear. A little pad and you could almost take a nap here!

I drilled and tapped holes to secure the tube using expanded PVC spacers, P-clamps, and stainless screws

Tube and hose barb fittings came next

Getting close

Everything’s connected, and the Swagelok fitting is marked with a Sharpie

1-1/4 turns later, the connection (should be) leak free

The last step was bending the starboard bukhead-to-filter line

I had a real hard time with this last short line. I’m not happy at all with the way it turned out, with all those extra bends. I cut it too long, but the bends on either end were perfect and I couldn’t bring myself to throw it in the recycle box. I’ll give another shot at it later, when the 90° Swagelok fitting I need there comes in.

Next up in our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: Fischer Panda Marine 12 Mini DP Genset

1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: Installing the Exhaust Risers

Last week it was the Throne Room paint job that finally got done. This week, the exhaust risers got installed.

In the trunk

On the way to the boatyard

Hanging by a string

Hanging by a string

I suspended the showerhead from the CO2 fire extinguisher pipes to take the weight while I put the bolts in.

Starboard showerhead is pointed toward the muffler inlet

Starboard showerhead is pointed toward the muffler inlet

New old stock

New old stock

I’ve had this 6″ exhaust hose for a long time, but it’s been wrapped in plastic and the rubber is still like-new. It’s nice to finally be installing stuff like this that’s been in the way for so long.

Starboard riser is installed

Starboard riser is installed

As a precaution, I used stainless safety wire to secure the Inferno Wrap, especially near the flange and the showerhead.

Not elegant, but it works

Not elegant, but it works

Exhaust temp sender

Exhaust temp sender

Temp sender base is installed in the flange port

Temp sender base is installed in the flange port

Starboard side exhaust is done

Starboard side exhaust is done

Port side riser is ready to install

Port side riser is ready to install

The flange gasket is hanging from the raw water outlet of the heat exchanger in the picture above. It’s not a metal gasket, which is what came with the engines. Hopefully, this type will seal better than the originals.

The OEM flange gaskets showed signs of leaking

The OEM flange gaskets showed signs of leaking

Major blowouts

Port riser showerhead is pointing at the right place

Port riser showerhead is pointing at the right place

Port riser hose is installed

Port riser hose is installed

Port exhaust temp sender is installed

Port exhaust temp sender is installed

The only thing left to complete the exhaust installation is installing raw water hoses. It’s taken a long time to get to this point, but it sure feels good getting this done.

Next up in our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: The V-berth Bulkhead

1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: Welding the Port Exhaust Riser

First, the bad news. One of my Boatamalan fairing crew guys died last Saturday morning. He was 29.  Went out for beers with buddies after work the night before. Had 7~8 over the course of 6 hours…got home around midnight. At 4:30am, he called his buddy to say he wasn’t feeling well and wouldn’t be going to work. He went back to bed, but at 6:30am when his wife nudged him to wake him up…he was gone. Stone cold, but without ever having had any kind of health problems. Gus was the brother of my painter, and when we painted the boat back in 2013, the lead painter was up on the scaffolding to paint the top portions of the hull while Gus was below spraying near the chine at the bow. Gus flowed out the Awlgrip paint really well, and he was friendly, helpful, super hard worker…a good man. It’s too bad he’s gone…the second death of the year that’s affected me. 29-years old…I still can’t believe it.

Gus's handiwork

Gus’s handiwork…RIP

With that said, at long last, I finally started welding my exhaust risers together. I tacked the risers together in July 2016 then learned that I need to purge the air from the inside of the stainless tubing before welding. Failing to purge causes oxygen to react with parts of the stainless alloy, which turns it into a crusty black crystaline form on the inside of the tubes that’s prone to rapid corrosion degradation. To purge the air, I need to have a dual regulator that can attach to my one 80cf tank of argon. They make dual regulators that sell for ~$100 and up, but I figured I’d save a buck or two by just using pipe fittings I’ve already got and adding a second el-cheapo regulator off of ebay.

Turns out that was a stupid idea. I should have just bought the off-the-shelf dual regulator.

Eventually I got it all worked out, though, and got to welding.

My argon regulator needs a tee to another

My argon regulator needs a tee to another

Pull all the bits off one-by-one

Pull all the bits off one-by-one

Don’t worry…the valve is off. I don’t have a vice to work with–I broke mine–so the bottle provides a stable base.

To Avoid any HURT…do not unassemble.  oops…too late

All the bits and pieces

All the bits and pieces

The way I’ve laid out the pix, you might think there was a smooth transition from risking “hurt” to myself by “unassembling” the regulator, but you’d be wrong. The argon regulator on the left in the pic above sells for $7 on ebay, and it’s advertised as having 1/4 npt threads. It was coming from China, so I had to wait three weeks. The weekend after it arrived, I tried to assemble the whole thing but failed. Turns out those aren’t NPT threads at all…they’re M14X1.5mm. After an absurd amount of wrangling with the seller, just trying (but failing) to get them to correct the ad, I got a full refund on it for misadvertising. Then I found an M14X1.5mm to 1/4″ NPT adapter in England and ordered it. Another week gone. When I finally assembled it and attached it to the argon bottle, all of the joints were gas-tight except for the 1/4″ NPT side of the damned adapter. The more I looked at the threads, the more they looked to me like flat threads, not tapered NPT. Two months had gone by getting to this point, and the only options I could think of were to buy a dual regulator and be done with it or break out the Marine Tex epoxy and glue the leaking joints together.

Marine text did the trick

Marine Tex did the trick

Ready to go

Ready to go

The gold regulator feeds the AlphaTIG, the chrome one feeds the fish tank bubbler at the end of the clear 1/8″ ID PVC hose. The bubbler will act as a diffuser for the gas inside the pipe, which they say helps smooth out the flow, avoid mixing of argon with the air in the pipe (argon is heavier than air), which helps push all of the O2 in the air out of the exhaust pipe.

It was late on that Sunday when I finally got the regulators installed and ready to go…too late to start welding. So I closed up shop and planned to come back the following weekend and get to welding. I spent the whole week “image training” how I’d do each weld, practicing smooth hand movements in the air with my hands holding pretend filler and TIG torch. When the following weekend arrived, I suited up in coveralls, went to the shop, turned on the lights, but when I went to turn on the argon I found it was already on. I’d forgotten to turn off the bottle valve the week before. Checking the gauge, the brand new bottle I’d just bought a week before was down from 1500psi to 500.

Son of a ….

After the Marine Tex had cured and I’d installed it on the argon bottle, I spritzed all of the pipe fittings with soapy water to make sure they were gas tight. But I hadn’t spritzed the main tank connection. So I spritzed it and, sure enough, a bubble started growing out of one spot. It’d been leaking all week long.

Son of a ….

So I got to purging and welding while hoping the bottle would hold out for at least one riser.

Ready to seal up the exhaust flange and start purging

Ready to seal up the exhaust flange and start purging

I’m using the 1/8″ NPT fitting on the flange as the port for the purge line. As the pipe fills with argon, it’ll push air out the far side of the exhaust.

On the far end, I taped up all but the top of the outlet

On the far end, I taped up all but the top of the outlet

Argon is heavier than air, so having the purge exhaust near the top of the opening will cause the whole pipe to fill with argon, shoving the air out the slit at the top of the pipe. It’s time to seal up the tape on the flange end and get to TIGging.

Stitch welded around the flange

Stitch welded around the flange

I’m not even close to being a pro-grade welder, but I’m not the worst of hobbyists, either. For all of that image training and practicing in the air, I still don’t have that smooth hand that the pros use to the a stack ‘o dimes weld. My welds may not be perfect, but I’m sure they’ll hold it together. Given the price I was quoted to have a set of risers built (>$5,000) and the amount of money I’m into the stainless tubing, flanges, and insulation thus far (~$1250, with plenty of leftover tubing), I still figure it’s been well worth it building my own. The experience, skills, and knowledge acquired alone has made it worth it!

Stitching the showerhead

Stitching the showerhead

The AlphaTIG has a post-flow function that keeps the argon flowing after I stop welding. The dial goes from 1 to 10, and cranking that up keeps argon flowing over the hot stainless so O2 in the air doesn’t oxidize the weld. Where you see color in the weld is where I got the piece too hot from traveling too slow. The post-flow wasn’t long enough, and air got to the weld while it was still hot enough to be oxidized. That’s what causes the purple and other colors in the weld area. I realized too late that I the post-flow knob goes far past the 10 mark. Cranking it fully open helped keep argon on the weld, but in the spots where I traveled too slowly and got it too hot, it was disappointing watching a beautiful, light gold colored weld turn purple in spots when the gas shut off.

Setting up to weld the showerhead nozzle plate

Setting up to weld the showerhead nozzle plate

Showerhead plates welded inside and out

Showerhead plates welded inside and out

The little pin I welded to the outside of the tube in the pic above is a short length of 3/32″ stainless TIG filler rod. I put those in a bunch of spots around the outside of the tube where I’ll wrap it with insulation. The pins will help keep the insulation from moving around.

Good penetration through to the inside, with no

Good penetration through to the inside, with no “sugar” oxidation

Showerhead nozzle plate welded on the

Showerhead nozzle plate welded on the “wet” side

I decided to weld the showerhead plates on both sides, but in retrospect it might have been fine (better, even) to just weld the outside. I was concerned about crevice corrosion if I didn’t get full penetration in the welds, especially inside the water-cooled portion of the showerhead. But the more I think about it, the exhaust will be hot even after the raw water flow to the showerhead shuts off. Any water remaining in the showerhead will drain into the exhaust hose. If no water remains in potential crevices on the backside of welds because the heat flashes it off, crevice corrosion can’t happen. The only time that corrosion could happen is when the engines are running and the showerheads are full of water. I’m thinking that it would be thousands of hours (maybe tens of thousands) before there was a problem. If I ever have to make another set, maybe I’ll just assemble the showerhead and weld the back plate and nozzle plates on the outside.

Aluminum plate caps off the tube

Aluminum plate caps off the tube

It was challenging clamping the irregularly shaped riser to my cheapo Harbor Freight welding bench so the outlet at the showerhead was pointed up. Gravity will keep the argon purge in the tube, but the aluminum plate helps with that as well as serving as a heat sink. As I’m staring at this picture now, I’m thinking there was absolutely no reason to weld the outside here. Oh well…what’s done is done.

Showerhead nozzle plate welded on the exhaust outlet side

Showerhead nozzle plate welded on the exhaust outlet side

The gas ran out on the last insulation pin

The gas ran out on the last insulation pin

I’ll have to run to the local welding supply again to get another bottle of argon so I can continue welding the risers together. It’s all good though. And I’ve got to say, even though I can see that my welds aren’t the best, I’m still having a good time doing this part of the job.

Next up in our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: Welding the Starboard Exhaust Riser

1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: New Coolant Hoses, Clamps, and Coolant Test

While I wait for supplies to show up so I can finish the exhaust risers, I avoided the blistering heat of summer and headed into the relatively cool engine room to finish up the coolant systems.

Original(?) coolant hose was kinked

Original(?) exhaust manifold coolant hose on the right side was kinked; new formed hose on left won’t

Turbo coolant hose also kinked

Turbo coolant hose also kinked

Constant torque clamps eat the bands

Constant torque clamps eat the bands

Another CT clamp cannibalized itself

Another CT clamp cannibalized itself

I’ve never used Constant Torque clamps before, but I know some guys who swear by them. Clearly, Cummins likes them. But they seem to rip out the treaded portion of the bands. I suppose this could be from overtightening… Either way, I need to replace them. Like everything else, I figure out what parts I need, order them online, and hope they show up during the following week. I’ve pretty much stopped ordering parts locally, since state sales tax adds significantly to the cost of everything and shipping (even from far away places) tends to at least break even if not save money.

Out with the old, in with the new

Out with the old, in with the new

Much better...no kinks!

Much better…no kinks!

New silicon turbo coolant return hose

New silicon turbo coolant return hose

I also replaced the exhaust manifold coolant return hose

I also replaced the exhaust manifold coolant return hose

With all of the lines replaced, I tested the coolant to make sure it was within specs. From what I’ve read, the 6CTA engines have sleeved blocks and additives are required in the coolant to avoid crevice corrosion. When I drained the coolant it was extremely clean, so I ordered some test kits to check the status.

First color band

First color band shows good glycol

Second band

Second band is in the middle  for molybdate

Third band is a tad low, but within spec for nitrite

Third band is a tad low, but within spec for nitrite

Where the column and row cross is in the green

Where the column and row cross is in the green at ~1.5SCA Units/Gal

Port side was in the green, too

Port side was in the green, too

So I refilled the coolant systems, and that’s another check box on the honey-do list. I’m still waiting for my argon diffuser to arrive so I can finish welding the exhaust risers. The only things left to do on the engines is wrap up the fuel system and raw water supply.

Next up on our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: Building a Fume Extractor & Paint Filter Box

1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: New Exhaust Risers III

I’m finally back from the funeral trip abroad. Jet lag is slowly getting better, and as the fog has been clearing it’s become apparent that the Roamer will not splash in 2016. I could rush to get it done and have it ready to bring around to my home port a month later than I planned. But I’ve learned that rushing generally doesn’t work out well, and I’d need to splash around a month past the time the yard starts packing boats in tight for the winter. The downside to leaving it in the yard for another winter is that I’ll keep having to waste several hours per day driving to the yard and back every weekend. On the upside, it’s a lot closer to my Boatamalan painter, so as I install more mahogany panels in the interior it’ll be easier for him to come out and spray the ICA clear coat. It’s not ideal, but it is what it is.

In other news, I got the dry side of the starboard exhaust riser cut and tacked together. It was a bit more challenging to work out the angles than the port side riser.

Starboard riser will have to make a loop

Starboard riser will have to make a loop

It would be super easy to just make a straight shot out of the turbo and point it down to the muffler inlet. But the easy road would end up potentially destroying the engine if the muffler was ever to fill with water, since gravity would cause the water to flow into the turbo and engine long before it went over the hump and out the side of the hull. To make the exhaust system inherently safe, I’ll need to have a loop coming off the turbo and going as high as possible before turning and pointing back toward the muffler opening.

X marks the spillover spot

X marks the spillover spot

In the pic above, there’s a 1″ x 1″ x 30″ mahogany cleat clamped to the muffler inlet, which tells me the direction the riser needs to point in at the showerhead outlet. I’ve also tied a red and white collapsible mop handle to the bottom of the U-bend that connects the muffler outlet to the exhaust port through the side of the hull. The mop handle indicates the spillover point. As long as the final turn of the dry section of tubing is above that point, even if the muffler fills with water completely, gravity will naturally force the water to drain out the exhaust rather than backing up into the turbo and engine.

Somewhere around here will be inherently safe

Somewhere around here will be inherently safe

In the pic above, you can see the red mop handle clearly ~2″ or so below the bottom of the dry section exhaust tubing. That puts it well above the spillover point and also leaves sufficient room for the Inferno Wrap insulation I’ll use to keep the exhaust heat in the riser.

Trimming the tubing to fit the turbo flange

Trimming the tubing to fit the turbo flange

135° + 90° mandrel bend is a bit too much

135° showerhead tubing + 90° turn is a bit too loopy

Final fitting before tacking

Final fitting before tacking

Unbolt the whole thing and line up the Sharpie marks

Unbolt the whole thing and line up the Sharpie marks

Let the tacking begin!

Let the tacking begin!

Tacked all around

Tacked all around

Re-attach the riser, final fit, and mark the showerhead section

Re-attach the riser, final fit, and mark the showerhead section

Remove the riser, line up the Sharpie marks, and tack all around

Remove the riser, line up the Sharpie marks, and tack all around

Tacking complete!

Tacking complete!

Loopy riser

Loopy riser

Well above the spillover point

Well above the spillover point

That wraps up Phase 1 of my riser build. They’re tacked together, with the showerhead ends pointing toward the muffler inlets. I’m still waiting for my argon diffuser to arrive, which I need to finish the welding. I’ve already got a couple of lengths of 6″ stainless tubing that I’ll use for the showerhead itself, but I also need to finish the CAD drawings for the showerhead end plates. Then I need to find somebody with a CNC cutting machine who can cut the ends per the CAD drawings.  All in due time.

Next up on our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: New Coolant Hoses, Clamps, and Coolant Test

1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: New Exhaust Risers II

DATELINE: Far side of planet earth (finally getting over jet lag, just in time to return stateside and start over).

While working on the engine wiring, there were several times when the project got stalled because I didn’t have the right hardware to get ‘er done. Since I can only work on the boat on weekends, a week can go by waiting for new parts to show up so I can continue the job. There are plenty of other things to do on the boat, though, and getting the exhaust system finished is a big item on the honey-do list. I’ve got all the tubing I need. I just need to finish preparing the mufflers, then cut, tack, and weld the risers together.

Stainless crush sleeves get bonded to the muffler inlets and outlets

In retrospect, I may have been able to save several hundreds of dollars by buying a 5-foot length of 6″ stainless tubing and cutting it to size rather than buying Centek crush sleeves at $58/ea (wholesale). Ah well…that wouldn’t be the first time I made a noob choice that cost more than it had to.

ta

High temp epoxy thickened with glass bubbles and cabosil bonds sleeve to the muffler

ta

Smooth the epoxy and clamp the sleeve in place

ta

Rubber pads on the bottom to isolate vibrations

I still haven’t decided for sure how much I want to isolate the mufflers so they don’t transmit exhaust vibrations. Since they’re not solidly attached to the engines, vibration may not be a problem at all. Time will tell.

ta

Muffler gets placed on its platform

Starboard muffler loosely positioned

Starboard muffler loosely positioned

The 180° connector above the muffler allows it to be rotated and also moved in a small arc to line the inlet up with where the riser will be.

Next, figure out how to connect the turbo flange to the muffler

Next, figure out how to connect the turbo flange to tubing pointed at the muffler

Cutting somewhere around here ought to do it

Cutting somewhere around here ought to do it

And then another one up here should wrap it up

And then another one up here should wrap it up

Harbor Freight bandsaw cuts pretty straight when its adjusted right

Harbor Freight bandsaw cuts pretty straight when its adjusted right

I had a problem with slightly crooked cuts on the stainless tubing I used for the fuel inlets, which took more work on the disk sander to get the mating surfaces fitting tightly. With the bigger 4-inch tubing I’m using on the exhaust, it was even more of a priority to make sure the cuts were all true. I followed online instructions for truing 4×6 metal-cutting bandsaws, and it cuts nice and straight now.

Touch up on the ShopSmith disk sander

Square up the cuts on the ShopSmith disk sander

Good fit

Pretty good fit…just a bit more and it’ll be perfect

Looks about right

Looks about right

Ready to tack

Position is marked with a Sharpie…ready to tack

Thick flange and thin tubing are a bit more challenging to tack than similar materials

Mahogany cleats position the tubing perfectly

Mahogany cleats position the tubing perfectly

The muffler inlets are ~6″ in diameter. By clamping two 1″ x 1″ x 24″ mahogany cleats to the inside of the inlets, the distance between the two inner surfaces of the cleats is ~4″. By clamping the 4″ tubing to the other end of the cleats, I can position the mandrel-bent section while being confident that the other end is pointed directly at the center of the muffler inlet. When I weld on the showerhead, which will be made of 6″ tubing, it will be pointed right at the muffler. That’s the theory, anyway.

More tubing cuts

More tubing cuts

Touch up the cuts for a perfect fit

Touch up the cuts for a perfect fit

Saw marks = gaps

Bandsaw blade marks on the cut = gaps where the tubing will butt together

Saw marks = gaps

After a bit more sanding, no saw marks = no gaps

Nice and flat, with no gaps

Nice and flat, with no gaps

Tack this bit to that bit...

Tack this bit to that bit…

Add a bit here across the top

Add a bit here across the top

Double-check the angle down to the muffler

Double-check the angle down to the muffler

Note that the “spillover point” on the dry exhaust side is well above the lowest point of the 180° connector coming out of the muffler. That way, if the exhaust system fills with water it will naturally drain out the side of the hull rather than backing up into the engine. The 6″ exhaust pipe out the hull side would have to be completely full and still overflowing under substantial pressure before water can end up in the turbo. Gravity makes that pretty much impossible.

Tack in place

The final piece of tubing is tacked in place

Ready for final welding!

Ready for final welding!

The dry side of the port exhaust riser is ready to be welded, but I’m still awaiting the delivery of some gear to purge air from inside the tube and replace it with argon. I also have to make the dry section of the starboard riser and have some parts CNC machined for the showerhead.

Next up on our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer 46 Refit: New Exhaust Risers III

1969 Chris Craft Roamer Refit: Installing Chris Craft Senders on Cummins Engines

I got the engine wiring all done, both port and starboard, so the last step for engine electrical is to install the original Chris Craft senders on the Cummins 6CTA Diamonds (which also retained their original senders). This will allow the Cummins panels I’ll one day install in the ER and also the refurbished Chris Craft gauges at the helm to both work like they should.

OE Chris Craft low oil pressure alarm switches and water temp senders

One of two Chris Craft oil pressure senders

New 200°F overheat alarm senders

New 200°F overheat alarm senders

Gasoila is a great thread sealant

Gasoila is a great thread sealant

Top of the exhaust manifold is perfect for the high temp alarm sender

Top of the exhaust manifold is perfect for the high temp alarm sender

I just had to convince the OE Cummins plug to come out.

OE Cummins plug removed

200°F overheat alarm switch installed

200°F overheat alarm switch installed

Cummins water temp sender

OE Cummins water temp sender is waaay back behind the alternator

This is not a good place to put in a Tee and add the Chris Craft sender.

Factory Cummins Tee in the coolant circuit looks promising

Factory Cummins Tee in the coolant circuit looks promising

The black hose coming from the left is the turbo cooling return line. The white-painted hose heading down goes to the coolant filter.

The solution: stainless steel 4-way cross

The solution: stainless steel 4-way cross

On the four-way cross in the pic above, you can see that it’s marked 1/2. So the 1/4″ to 3/8″ NPT adapters that came with the original Chris Craft water temp senders won’t work. I need 1/4″ to 1/2″ adapters, but I was able to use the 1/4″ to 3/8″ adapters for the turbocator boost line fittings. Booya.

It’s amazing how happy little victories like that can make me. 😉

Out with the old...

Out with the old…

And let me assure you, extracting that Tee without removing the starter so I could fit a pipe wrench in there was a bear! Fortunately, not even a bit of knuckle skin was lost during the exercise. Unfortunately, after assembling the cross on the salon floor, I realized there’s not enough room to install it fully assembled.

First, the bare cross goes in

First, the bare cross goes in with a new stainless nipple and lots of Gasoila

Turbo coolant nipple and Chris Craft temp sensor installed

Turbo coolant nipple and Chris Craft temp sensor installed

Needs new hose and clamps, but looks good otherwise

Needs new hose and clamps, but looks good otherwise

Why oh why do people paint over rubber parts? When you touch them they flex, then the paint falls off in chunks.

Recently installed wiring for Chris Craft temp sensor is ready to attach

Recently-installed wiring for Chris Craft temp sensor is already in the new loom and ready to attach

Oil gallery port near the oil filter

Oil gallery port just forward of the oil filter

Good spot for a Chris Craft low oil pressure alarm switch

Good spot for a Chris Craft low oil pressure alarm switch

That’s a wrap for the senders on the right side of the engine. So I crawled around to the left side and, like any reasonable man, tackled the easy pickins first.

Turbocator boost line ties into manifold port

Turbocator boost line ties into the most out-of-the-way intake manifold port

There were two other ports I could have used for the boost line, but both of them were near the injector pump. I could see the boost lines getting bumped and snagged if they’re out in the open like that. This port just behind the aftercooler tubing wasn’t hard to get to with a swivel and socket. Installing it here keeps the tubing out of the way and lessens the chances of me accidentally ripping it out of the fitting while messing around in the ER.

Unfortunately, the engineers at Cummins put no such thought into their placement of gear cooling hoses or wire looms.

Deep within the bowels of the left side of the engine, I found an oil port

Deep within the bowels of the left side of the engine, I found an oil port

Gad.

There are other oil ports, but they’re blocked by metal pieces that won’t move without lots of new pieces being fabricated. This one in the pic above is just aft of the OE Cummins oil pressure sender. The only thing blocking it is all of this…stuff.

See?

Where there’s a will…there’s still junk in the way!

But if you look very closely at the pic above, there’s a black object just to the right of the baggie-wrapped fuel pump. That, my friends, is a 1969 OE Chris Craft oil pressure sender installed in the left-side oil gallery of a Cummins 6CTA block. Booyah.

And, again, no knuckle skin was lost in the operation. I know…it was OK to think it, but I’m getting cocky writing about it. I will pay with the loss of much knuckle skin later. This is known. 🙂

Different angle, with new oil pressure sender wiring hooked up

Different angle, with new oil pressure sender wiring hooked up

I really do like that cloth electrical tape. Sooo pleasant to work with compared to the PVC junk.

So that’s pretty much a wrap for the engine electrical, which was a big item on the pre-splash honey-do list. I’ve got new coolant hoses and clamps on the way and test kits for the coolant so I can get the anti-crevice corrosion additive just right (this is a sleeved block and pitting is a known issue that’s resolved with corrosion inhibitors). The exhaust system is well over half-way done. All of the raw water cooling parts are sitting there ready to be welded in or bolted on. I should be able to get those things done fairly quickly. Meanwhile, my boatamalan painter finally got a break in his schedule and has been making great progress on the V-berth head (AKA the Throne Room). Oh, and the glass for the salon, helm, and all of the hatches and portholes finally showed up…what a bunch of work that was. Like I’ve said, there’s lots of stuff going on beyond what’s in any particular article. Stay tuned.

Next up on our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer Refit: Trim Tabs & Gauges

1969 Chris Craft Roamer Refit: Engine Wiring IV

With the OE Chris Craft wiring hooked up to the interface panel for the Cummins engines, next I need to dig into the Cummins loom and also install the senders for my completely refurbished Chris Craft gauges. But first, I wanted to install some sort of neutral safety switches. I spent a lot of time over the last few years wondering what sort of switches I should use and how I should place them so the switches would interrupt the start circuit when the gear levers were engaged either way. Then one day recently, I realized that the ZF gears I’ve got come with built-in neutral safety switches! That’s much better! But for some reason, the neutral safety switch wiring in the Cummins engine harnesses terminate in  factory-installed dead ends. All I had to do was modify the wiring so the neutral safety feature will work from the Cummins panels I will one day install in the engine room or from the Chris Craft helm.

An unloved neutral safety switch

An unloved neutral safety switch

Pretty simple device

Pretty simple device

Something inside the gear pushes on the ball, which breaks the circuit in the switch when it’s put into gear. Nice and simple design.

Failed switch or failed screw

Failed switch or failed screw?

I found many forum discussions on the internet about these switches failing. But it’s a simple design that seems fairly robust and is used by ZF, Paragon, and other marine gear manufacturers. Based on what I saw on my switches, contact failure at the steel washer is the more likely cause of switch failure. I bought new ones anyway, and found prices ranged widely: many sellers listed the switches for $50 or more under the ZF brand name. I ended up picking up a set of Paragon branded switches for $17 each.

Digging into the Cummins loom

It’s pretty obvious somebody has been in this loom before. It appears that when they installed the 20′ extension, they clipped the wires rather than just plugging the OE Cummins connectors together, which makes no intuitive sense. They didn’t even bother to use shrink connectors. Either way, the white wire comes from the neutral safety switch to the connector for the Cummins panel. There’s also a black wire that goes to the neutral safety switch, but it enters the loom and heads away from the connector. Hmmm…time to dig in.

That cloth electrical tape is good stuff

That cloth electrical tape is good stuff

The black wire stays in the main loom that passes under the turbo

The black wire stays in the main loom that passes under the turbo

Ah-Ha! All of the grounds come together at this one connector under the turbo

Ah-Ha! All of the grounds come together at this one connector under the turbo

The Cummins schematic didn’t show all grounds connected at the same point. I’d been trying for a while to figure out where all the black wires tapped into the ground circuit. It wasn’t apparent until I opened up the loom in the most inaccessible place on the block…under the turbo.

Don't need the 20' loom extension anymore

Don’t need the 20′ loom extension anymore…

But I do need the factory connector at the far end of the extension

But I do need the factory connector at the far end of the extension

I know where each and every wire goes!

I know where each and every wire goes!

I plan on using Cummins’ wire scheme for all of the Chris Craft senders I’ll be adding to the engines, so purple is ignition, red is 12vdc+, brown is water temp, etc. The 20′ extension harness will provide the wiring I need.

Hello. What's that about

Hello. What’s that about “MARINE WIRE”?

I was surprised to cut back the insulation and find bare copper wire, since I always thought a hallmark of marine wire is that it’s tinned. I guess if you’re buying wire by the truckload, you can order whatever you want printed on the outside of the insulation.

New safety switch terminal

The neutral safety switch completes a circuit to ground when the gear is in neutral. When the Cummins’ panel sees ground on the neutral safety circuit, it activates the Start circuit, so when you hit the START button 12vdc+ current passes to the aux. starter solenoid and the internal combustion magic begins. But on the Chris Craft side, the START circuit is always hot. So to get the two to work together, I believe all I need to do is to cut the ground from the aux. starter solenoid at the big ground connection point under the turbo, then add a separate ground line from the safety switch to the cut wire. That way, even if the START switch gets hit up at the Chris Craft helm, the ground side of the  circuit will be interrupted if the gear isn’t in neutral. The Cummins side is wired per the factory schematic, so it should be unaffected by this.

With the neutral safety circuit pretty much done, I installed the Turbocator wiring and boost lines since they also have to join up with the loom that goes under the turbo…and I never want to have to dig into that ever again.

Turbocator wiring

Turbocator wiring & boost tubing

Then put the cable/boost line into a loom

Turbocator cable/boost line goes into a loom

Thermocouple wiring is almost done

Thermocouple wiring is almost done

I was so impressed with how difficult it was to remove that cloth electrical tape that I ordered a couple of rolls, along with some 1/4″ and 3/8″ split loom.

Thermocouple wiring is ready to go

Thermocouple wiring is ready to go

And that's a wrap

And that’s a wrap

All of the engine wiring is done now. In the pic above, you can see all of the Cummins wires on the right side of the terminal block, with the Chris Craft wiring on the left side. The next step will be to install the various senders that work with the OE Chris Craft gauges.

Next up on our 1969 Chris Craft Roamer Refit: Installing Chris Craft Senders on Cummins Engines