Possibly 1 for oldschool mechanics - Isuzu c201
Discussion
Not sure if this should be here or in the boat section - mods please feel free to move if necessary.
In brief
I have just bought an old Dutch barge with an engine that is stamped on rocker and elsewhere "THERMO KING" Through goggling I am 99% certain it is a marinised Isuzu c201 engine but not 100%, it could be an earlier Mercedes or a later Yanmar.
Ran upriver under load for about5 hrs.. and very sweet it ran too - however it does have a drip from the waterpump and the pulley is very "flexible / wobbly"
Does anyone have, or know where I can get a parts manual as I am not having much luck locating one before I order a new pump,
Many thanks in advance....T
In brief
I have just bought an old Dutch barge with an engine that is stamped on rocker and elsewhere "THERMO KING" Through goggling I am 99% certain it is a marinised Isuzu c201 engine but not 100%, it could be an earlier Mercedes or a later Yanmar.
Ran upriver under load for about5 hrs.. and very sweet it ran too - however it does have a drip from the waterpump and the pulley is very "flexible / wobbly"
Does anyone have, or know where I can get a parts manual as I am not having much luck locating one before I order a new pump,
Many thanks in advance....T
treepke said:
Not sure if this should be here or in the boat section - mods please feel free to move if necessary.
In brief
I have just bought an old Dutch barge with an engine that is stamped on rocker and elsewhere "THERMO KING" Through goggling I am 99% certain it is a marinised Isuzu c201 engine but not 100%, it could be an earlier Mercedes or a later Yanmar.
Ran upriver under load for about5 hrs.. and very sweet it ran too - however it does have a drip from the waterpump and the pulley is very "flexible / wobbly"
Does anyone have, or know where I can get a parts manual as I am not having much luck locating one before I order a new pump,
Many thanks in advance....T
If it's still an original pump, it may have a manufacturers part number on it which would be more helpful.In brief
I have just bought an old Dutch barge with an engine that is stamped on rocker and elsewhere "THERMO KING" Through goggling I am 99% certain it is a marinised Isuzu c201 engine but not 100%, it could be an earlier Mercedes or a later Yanmar.
Ran upriver under load for about5 hrs.. and very sweet it ran too - however it does have a drip from the waterpump and the pulley is very "flexible / wobbly"
Does anyone have, or know where I can get a parts manual as I am not having much luck locating one before I order a new pump,
Many thanks in advance....T
stevieturbo said:
If it's still an original pump, it may have a manufacturers part number on it which would be more helpful.
Many thanks for the reply.......checked today...... definitely is a C201...couldn't make out the part No but this is definitely it: TB-37-11-4576 Pump water c201.... not managed just to find one outside of the USA yet.Would be nice to locate a manual for it but not going to hold my breath.
I just logged onto a yanmar dealer site for you and I can't find either a reference to the part number, or the C201 engine series (I guess c201 is the isuzu series). By the looks of it, it's a 1980ish engine? If you can find the yanmar engine series or part no for it I'll take another look....
MattYorke said:
I just logged onto a yanmar dealer site for you and I can't find either a reference to the part number, or the C201 engine series (I guess c201 is the isuzu series). By the looks of it, it's a 1980ish engine? If you can find the yanmar engine series or part no for it I'll take another look....
Definitely the Isuzu c201 Matt..... as they were made specifically for TK I wondered if other Isuzu engines used the same part.Found them listed in US sites but mostly "not in stock"
here's the blighter
stevieturbo said:
At the end of the day, no big deal buying from the US if it's readily available.
Certainly google suggests it's cheap anyway.
But you'd think some boat repair/build type places may have sourcing options locally ?
Try the old yellow pages for such things ?
Just fired off a few emails to US suppliers...fingers X'd one has stock.Certainly google suggests it's cheap anyway.
But you'd think some boat repair/build type places may have sourcing options locally ?
Try the old yellow pages for such things ?
If you can't get a new pump, the other alternative is to have a decent engineers install new bearings and seals in the existing one.
I recently had a couple of old ZF steering boxes (off E24 BMWs) refurbished by a proper old-school engineers near Brooklands (and a damned good job they did too)! Whilst I was there, I noticed they also appeared to be doing quite a bit of work on old marine engines. Don't know if they could help but maybe worth a try if you're stuck:
Holman Engineering: http://www.holman-engineering.co.uk/ ask to speak to Jeff Holman.
I recently had a couple of old ZF steering boxes (off E24 BMWs) refurbished by a proper old-school engineers near Brooklands (and a damned good job they did too)! Whilst I was there, I noticed they also appeared to be doing quite a bit of work on old marine engines. Don't know if they could help but maybe worth a try if you're stuck:
Holman Engineering: http://www.holman-engineering.co.uk/ ask to speak to Jeff Holman.
Edited by Ian_UK1 on Tuesday 14th July 18:49
Ian_UK1 said:
If you can't get a new pump, the other alternative is to have a decent engineers install new bearings and seals in the existing one.
I recently had a couple of old ZF steering boxes (off E24 BMWs) refurbished by a proper old-school engineers near Brooklands (and a damned good job they did too)! Whilst I was there, I noticed they also appeared to be doing quite a bit of work on old marine engines. Don't know if they could help but maybe worth a try if you're stuck:
Holman Engineering: http://www.holman-engineering.co.uk/ ask to speak to Jeff Holman.
This route looking increasingly likely....1 No and 2 No-replies so far.I recently had a couple of old ZF steering boxes (off E24 BMWs) refurbished by a proper old-school engineers near Brooklands (and a damned good job they did too)! Whilst I was there, I noticed they also appeared to be doing quite a bit of work on old marine engines. Don't know if they could help but maybe worth a try if you're stuck:
Holman Engineering: http://www.holman-engineering.co.uk/ ask to speak to Jeff Holman.
Edited by Ian_UK1 on Tuesday 14th July 18:49
looks very much like the same part to my untrained eye but can't find confirmation..anybody?
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/221823646030?_trksid=p20...
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/221823646030?_trksid=p20...
PositronicRay said:
It should be fine with just the gasket, if all the mating surfaces are clean and true.
But a bit of sealant gives a little extra peace of mind.As for loctite...unless any bolt holes go into waterways I wouldnt be using a thread lock of any kind. I'd be using anti-seize compound of some sort.
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