y pipe
#1
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y pipe
On through prop applications, is there a check valve in the Y pipe? Or does the system rely on enough vertical rise to prevent back flow?
#2
Ginger or Mary Ann?
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In a way. There is a butterfly assembly in each horn right at the rubber boot. Older years used a single flapper style like what are used in exhaust tips. The replacement flappers are the new style. They just snap in. They are a good thing to have for that very reason you mentioned.
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#3
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These flappers are no where close to being water tight right? They just reduce the pressure head of the water rushing backwards? Does 1/2 of the flapper cover each branch of the Y?
#4
Ginger or Mary Ann?
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Originally posted by Cord
These flappers are no where close to being water tight right? They just reduce the pressure head of the water rushing backwards? Does 1/2 of the flapper cover each branch of the Y?
These flappers are no where close to being water tight right? They just reduce the pressure head of the water rushing backwards? Does 1/2 of the flapper cover each branch of the Y?
Yes
There are 2 pair to a set. 1 goes in the top of each leg where the divertor valve is connected with the rubber boot.
Picture a standard home door hinge, with the pin in the middle and each half of the hinge hanging down into the y-pipe, but partially opened. As water comes up the y-pipe from bouncing while stropped, the water will contact the 2 hinge halves(4 total) and force them to spread outward and seal against the y-pipe wall, stopping the water flow.
They just snap in at the top of the pipe and are very cheap. sumtin like $30 a set??? I forget.
Old style below (New style is the "hinge design)pt # 4
Last edited by US1 Fountain; 12-05-2003 at 05:29 PM.
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US1Fountain is correct. I replaced them on mine a couple years ago. The pivot shaft on the old style flappers had started to egg-shape the holes in the Y-pipe. The new style rubber butterfly wing style is much better.
#7
Ginger or Mary Ann?
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Originally posted by Sledge Hammer
How do you know when they are bad and require changing?
How do you know when they are bad and require changing?
But best is to just remove the elbow, or what ever, that is clamped to the top of the y-pipe and look. If they are the 1 piece valve, I would replace it while it is apart.
There are some that have had the older style flappers break, fall into the y-pipe, and rub a hole thru the side of it allowing water to enter the boat. I would venture to say you DO NOT want that.
I installed a new set of the old style a few yrs ago, and by the end of that same season, the pin wore thru the brass bushing,wore the pin ends almost off and egg shaped the hole as MACDAD said. Only time and they would have fallen inside.
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Yea, you'd have to pull the engine to get it out.