[How-To] Driveshaft Seal Carrier Retrofit
#21
Posted 09 May 2004 - 04:23 PM
#22
Posted 10 May 2004 - 08:15 PM
Thanks for the how-to Tig.
- Gabrieltal likes this
#23
Posted 10 May 2004 - 08:22 PM
#24
Posted 13 May 2004 - 02:41 PM
#25
Posted 13 May 2004 - 02:48 PM
#26
Posted 15 May 2004 - 05:16 PM
It just so happens that I brought the OLD CARBON RING ASSEMBLY with me. Popped the pump off, snatched the carrier out and reinstalled the carbon ring stuff. Reinstalled the pump, pushed the bellows forward a bit to tighten it up, and put the boat back in the water. All in less time than it took this guy to get his BIG SKi Nautique on the trailer because it broke too.... Old reliable carbon ring..... got me through the day really nicely- sealed good too (I aligned the engines the other day) and would plane on either engine!!
I used the neoprene weather stripping I bought for .79 cents before I left to seal the pump housing with. When I took off the pump, it looked really good to see that it had actually sealed around the wear ring- I could see where it had compressed the neoprene. Sooooo.... a fun time was had by....me.
Will I stick with the carriers? Probably, if I can figure out how to make it stay in the hose. I thought about making a shallow notch in it with the dremel, all the way around it. Give it something to bite into.
Or, put the stiff hoses back on and call it a wash....
The other engine I had to put on the carbon ring seal again today after I took it off and realized I had cooked the rear seal out of it. I noticed the bearing was missing part of the race. Not good. So I put the old stuff back on and it works good. I'm glad I was by myself and not on a family outing- I would never hear the end of it.
#27
Posted 16 May 2004 - 11:35 AM
Attached Files
#28
Posted 24 March 2005 - 12:47 PM
I spent a week on a houseboat at Lake of the Ozarks and put a bunch of hours in one weeks time.
I have had no problems at all.
#29
Posted 24 March 2005 - 02:08 PM
#30
Posted 05 June 2008 - 10:56 AM
#31
Posted 10 February 2010 - 08:25 PM
Thanks for any help.
#32
Posted 10 February 2010 - 08:36 PM
Give World of Powersports a call, http://worldofpowersports.com -- I believe they should be able to provide a part # for you.I have a 98 sportster 1800 and Im going to do this to my boat. I had already bought the carriers and just read i cant use my 3 groove shafts. Does anyone know what shafts I can use and maybe a part #? Are all the shafts different lenghts? Spline counts? There are a lot of Drive shafts on ebay for cheap but I need to know what to order. I know you can have them welded but I'd rather keep them orginal.
Thanks for any help.
Want to spread the word about SeaDooSportBoats.com and sport some official SDSB Gear? See what we have to offer here, http://seadoosportboats.com/gear
#33
Posted 10 February 2010 - 09:43 PM
Kevin if you ever happen to take out your driveshafts again you might measure the length and how many splines it has for future records. I think i read you have a 96 or 98 challenger, maybe your could be the same as mine except for yours only had one groove. I wonder what the differance is between 1 or 3 groove shafts are? I think they all use the same Carbon ring setup.
#34
Posted 11 February 2010 - 08:37 AM
This retrofit was done by another member, but if I ever do anything similar I will try to provide the measurements. We had a 2000 160 Speedster and now have a 2008 180 Challenger.
Want to spread the word about SeaDooSportBoats.com and sport some official SDSB Gear? See what we have to offer here, http://seadoosportboats.com/gear
#35
Posted 09 September 2011 - 11:14 AM
I ordered the complete carrier assemblies today from JetSkiMechanic.com
I had several options, either buy the parts and assemble them myself, or go ahead and get the carriers with seals and bearings. Buying the parts separate could cost more, actually- unless you shop around for aftermarket seals and bearings. Even then by the time you pay for the parts and shipping charges from the various parts vendors, the price could be about the same. You could be lucky and have a bearing shop local who has the bearings and seals in stock. The most expensive part in the assembly is the seals- assuming you go with the OEM from a Seadoo dealer. Even the dealers prices vary, with $13 - $24 dollars being the range.
When they get here, I will let you know how it goes!
How did you determine they were bad to begin with? I just bought a used Sportster 1800 and the starboard shaft seal/bearing seems totaly sloppy.
Paul
#36
Posted 20 April 2012 - 12:23 AM
I've been piecing back together my 1997 Speedster and found this post VERY helpful, thanks everyone who contributed to it!
I purchased the WSM bearings as well and the seals are a tight fit. So DO NOT skip the step about using the epoxy to fill in the clip groove. I ended up tearing one of my seals thinking I could just be careful and avoid this step.
I live in a small town so synthetic bearing grease was not something easy to come by. Got on Amazon and found Royal Purple Synthetic Ultra Performance Grease. It has good reviews, many about how it keeps the heat down pretty well. Seems like a good fit for this application so I am gonna give it a try.
My local automotive machine shop was able to help me with a couple of things. First was I had them cut grooves into the seal carriers where the hose clamped on using a lathe. It just seemed a little easier to have the machinist do this instead of messing with a Dremel. Second, I had the machine shop use their crank shaft polisher to cleaning up the bearing and seal surface of the drive shaft. The carbon seal and boot left it a bit messy. You should probably have them do this after applying the epoxy, this way they will remove any excessive epoxy while polishing the bearing and seal surface. None of this costs much, the machinist I know there did it all for a case of beer.
Also, just buy hard wall exhaust hose, I baught what was listed as the "Seadoo part number" from SBT and what I got was a couple of pieces of standard 1-5/8 inch hard wall hose that I could have bought from West Marine online for a third of the cost.
Hitting the lake next weekend. I will have this retrofit combined with new solas impellers, new wear rings, group k head work, fresh top ends with new pistons, and rebuilt carbs. Pretty excited to see how it all turns out!
#37
Posted 13 May 2012 - 09:53 PM
I took the boat to the lake this weekend and it preformed amazing! The only thing was the hose clamps seem to loosen up a bit after about an hour of running. So be sure to keep an eye on that. Other then that everything went well.
I highly recommend this mod to anyone with an early speedster. The boat now has much better mid range power and hookup out of the water. Before the mods the boat could barely pull a 200lb wakeboarder out of the water, now it does this easily!
Also check out Group K for their 720 speedster mods, I am running their 91 octane heads and solas props. These combined with new wear rings and carrier bearings have really brought this boat to life!!
#38
Posted 09 September 2012 - 10:27 AM
Since I did the carrier retrofit, I have had so much more boat vibration.
It appears the motor - shaft - pump alignment is not straight.
Is there a way to align the motor and shaft to get rid of the vibration?
It makes me uneasy feeling like something is going to fly apart while on the water.
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