Yes it is from winterization.
I guess I thought it worked like this:
1. Water enters boat underneath and passes through water pump
2. Water circulates through engine and transmission
3. Water travels through heater core
4. Water falls back in to lake.
This would mean that at rest the system would passively drain out - at least for the most part.
Although now that I think about it more, you don't want the water all to leave. Otherwise you end up with no water when you start the boat. So the pump, or something near it, must act as a check valve. This would explain why the water was gushing out of my heater core.
However with that being said I assumed to winterize you run RV antifreeze through that whole system and then drain. But it seems like they left it full. This means that the fishes get a good dose of antifreeze every spring.
Is the heater run via a separate closed cooling system by any chance?
Sent from my Passport
I guess I thought it worked like this:
1. Water enters boat underneath and passes through water pump
2. Water circulates through engine and transmission
3. Water travels through heater core
4. Water falls back in to lake.
This would mean that at rest the system would passively drain out - at least for the most part.
Although now that I think about it more, you don't want the water all to leave. Otherwise you end up with no water when you start the boat. So the pump, or something near it, must act as a check valve. This would explain why the water was gushing out of my heater core.
However with that being said I assumed to winterize you run RV antifreeze through that whole system and then drain. But it seems like they left it full. This means that the fishes get a good dose of antifreeze every spring.
Is the heater run via a separate closed cooling system by any chance?
Sent from my Passport
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