I have milky transmission fluid and am not sure where to go from here. How I got to this point is a long story, but I'll try to keep it brief. Family took the boat out; I started on slalom w/ my wife driving.
- The boat reaction was delayed on takeoff. She would give throttle and it would take a sec before it responded. I took over and noticed the same thing (tranny slipping?). I shut down the skiing for the day and drove over to the sandbar near our house for a couple hours.
- Driving home the boat wasn't maintaining speed. I thought the throttle lever was just not holding speed like it sometimes does. I gave it some throttle and it didn't respond. I threw it in neutral and opened the rear hatch. Full of water and my bilge didn't kick on. The water wasn't quite high enough to spill into the side lockers or out the front under the flip-up seat, but there were definitely things getting wet that shouldn't. We shut down the boat, turned on the bilge and started bailing. Realized that no more water was coming in. Got a tow to the dock, put it on the lift, hooked it to the hose and cranked it. Water spraying everywhere in the engine compartment. Realized it was just a split intake hose. Replaced hose and in the process found a ton of impeller pieces. Changed my impeller only to find it was intact. I've had the boat 3 years and never had a busted one so no telling how long that crap has been in there. Boat fired right up w/ no leaks.
- Next weekend we put the boat in the water for a little test run. Fired right up again, but when I gave it throttle there was no movement (seems to be related to original problem, but maybe not).
- Put it back on the lift...and it wouldn't crank. Did some detective work and narrowed it down to the starter. It would have definitely been in water when the engine compartment filled. Replaced the starter and now it fires back up.
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