Lee ,
I am n awe of your knowledge . I hope to gain some of it from you . I feel like a greenhorn rookie talking boat talk with you , But im pretty quick . lol
Is my boats exhaust non factory ? It appears to look factory .It is definetly loud but in a good way . The manifolds sound like what u described in that it collects the exhaust nto a 3" downtube and exits thru the hull .
I will b at the boat tomorrow . I will have to take some more pics . It has the push button stinger outdrive but oddly enuf theres another shift setup jus n front of the push button one . with cables running to the rear of the boat . has the the hinged mounting platform for the head windshield half opens . hoses still intact . no head though . it has 2 fuel tanks n the rear . one aluminum and one steel with rust holes in it . . I will get the id #s off it tomorrow . cant seem to find em rt now . lol Thank you and hope your weekend has water in it . Jason The owner i bought it from , i say owner loosely . Thought it to b a 327 c.i. I am only assuming its a 307 or even that its a 1969 . lol
From: LKS@...
To: omc-boats@...
Date: Fri, 8 May 2009 09:13:53 -0600
Subject: [OMC-Boats] OMC Exhaust Manifolds (long post)
Hi Jason,
Always good to see pics of OMC Boats particularly
in their element. Thanks for sharing.
Your 307 original was fitted with the log-style
manifold. I see from your photo you are running straight, thru-transom exhaust
outlets? Are they in use?
Is your goal to return to stock, original OEM
style, as factory fitted? If so, with
all the talk about obsolete parts, it's nice to know these are still in
production and available from Barr Marine. In fact, Barr has manifolds for
all OMC sterndrives: http://barrmarine.net/wordpress/category/omc/
Just a word or two about marine manifold design,
might be in order. The original log-style OMC design does not incorporate
a riser-trap. The trap is that upward bend (simialr to the one under your
kitchen sink). The purpose of the trap is to keep sea water from coming back
into the manifold and potentially causing a hydraulic locked
engine.
With OMC's design tradition and focus on reducing
NVH (noise vibration harshness) they designed the exhaust to flow through each
side of the intermediate housing (on V-engines) and then exhaust gases are
combined in a generous 3-inch port down the (long) leg to exit behind the prop
through the anti-torque rudder.
This design not only resulted in acceptable
exhaust back pressure, but combined with the long-leg (height differential)
between manifold and underwater exhaust in effectively eliminated the need for a
trap and it's quiet and it safely gets fumes away from the boat (under
water).
While I would imagine your open-exhaust boat sounds
very cool, in some area it might violate ordinances. More importantly, as a
warning, I would hate to see you get water in your Chevy.
Which gets me back to Barr's manifold offerings.
You could install later OMC/Generic style, with center or rear outlet with
risers, which would give you some height differential and the protection of a
trap for routing your non-stock thru-transom edxhausts. Installing external
"flappers" also help. The later style manifolds are heavier and to
take up more space.
On a side note, while OMC never offered anything
other than the 200 hp, 300 cu in Buick V-8 and the 210 hp, 307 cu in Chevy V8 in
our 19-ft hulls, but beginning in 1971 they offered a hotter version of the 307
Chevy. It produced 235 or 245 hp depending on the year. These featured hotter
cams, higher CR, oil pan shields, straight-thru-transom exhausts, and the
expensive cast aluminum Z-28/LT-1 valve covers, also the blocks were
painted red-orange instead of OMC gray. Some of the 245's were
offered with the OMC Jet Drives, while others twisted long-leg
electric shift stringers and were installed in a few fast Panchanga boats (a
Donzi competitor).
Few small block Chevy people realize that Tonawanda
built these fairly respectable "hot" 307's to OMC specs in an era where the
327 and 350's got all the performance attention.
Most hot-rodders loath the 307, but frankly it's
one the smoothest, most economical and reliable marine engines OMC ever
sold.
OMC found they could get 302 and 351-W Fords a lot
cheaper and began supplying more of those as replacements for the Buick V6 and
Chevy V8's. It wasn't until Chevy introduced their V6 that GM got back into bed
with OMC.
Lee Shuster
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