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Port engine flywheel missing a tooth
- Mack
- Scurvy Dog
- Posts: 7
- Joined: December 19th, 2021, 7:53 pm
- Vessel Info: 1994 Carver 300 aft cabin. Twin 350 Crusaders, fresh water cooled. Twin Borg Warner inboard transmissions
- Location: Nanaimo
- Has thanked: 15 times
Port engine flywheel missing a tooth
I just put my rebuilt starter back in, and it cranks but makes a nasty clicking noise.
Sure enough, the Gopro revealed that the flywheel is missing a tooth.
Any advice?
How bad is this? Would you run it that way? I'm thinking the starter will start breaking off the next tooth if I keep cranking. I'm looking to sell the boat eventually, so it would be way better to fix it now.
I'm hoping I can disconnect the flywheel housing, support the aft end of the engine, unlag the motor mounts from the stringers and slide the engine forward enough to get inside the flywheel housing.
I'm picturing taking the flywheel off and having a tooth welded onto it if I cant find a replacement flywheel.
Any opinions on the strength of a welded tooth compared to original? Maybe a flywheel from another engine that will fit, in case I can't find a replacement?
Not sure how you would lift an engine out of this Carver Aft Cabin. Forklift extension coming in through the window?
Thanks folks
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Re: Port engine flywheel missing a tooth
Missing teeth can be noisy but have you also checked to ensure the clicking is from the missing tooth and not from low voltage resulting in a solenoid chatter?
- Mack
- Scurvy Dog
- Posts: 7
- Joined: December 19th, 2021, 7:53 pm
- Vessel Info: 1994 Carver 300 aft cabin. Twin 350 Crusaders, fresh water cooled. Twin Borg Warner inboard transmissions
- Location: Nanaimo
- Has thanked: 15 times
Re: Port engine flywheel missing a tooth
I'm still wrestling with the neutral safety switch wire connection on the starter solenoid. The post comes loose, so I took the starter off, to get myself some space to work on securing the post. I tightened the nut at the base of the NSS threaded post. Might put a lockwasher in there.
The NSS post nut was only finger tight when the chattering occurred. Maybe that caused the solenoid to chatter.
With the starter off again, I set up the go pro looking in the starter mount hole, and barred the engine over a full revolution. That's when I noticed the missing tooth. The flywheel also has a corroded section where it looks like the bottom 3 inches or so sat submerged. The missing tooth is not in the corroded area.
The gopro video showed how much corrosion debri was on the lip of the starter mount hole. It needs to be cleaned up.
Obviously this is where the starter grounds to the engine block. But the starter still has the whole contact area of the mounting flange meeting the flywheel housing, so?
If the chatter was caused by any of these things, then the sound I heard was unrelated to the missing tooth. Then the tooth is a coincidence? What convinced me of the missing tooth explanation was the regular timing of the sound, that seemed to match one rotation of the engine. When cranking slowed, the sound was delayed to match.
If running the engine this way damages the starter and not the flywheel, I may leave it for now. The starter can be removed and rebuilt again with new teeth, much more easily than the flywheel.
I have six weeks here before the yard rent doubles in the spring. I still have an entire transmission to remove, rebuild and install again.
Both jobs require support of the aft ends of the engines, as the motor mounts are on the transmission.
Glad to hear a flywheel should be easy to find. I will check the condition of the pressure plate.
Leaving it for now, or dealing with it right now, depends on the feasibility of sliding the motor forward to access the flywheel. The placement of my boat in the yard and lack of forklift means that pulling or even lifting an engine is probably not an option right now.
Thanks again. Your advice is much appreciated.
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Re: Port engine flywheel missing a tooth
- km1125
- Admiral
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Re: Port engine flywheel missing a tooth
If there's not enough room to slide the trans back (because it hits the shaft packing), then you also usually have an option to raise the rear of the assembly up so that the trans flange is higher than the propshaft flange. You have to remove the rear mounts anyways, you just end up blocking the rear of the engine higher to do it. You'd probably have to remove the exhaust because it's not flexible enough but you'd probably want to do that anyways to get easy access to everything (trans/flywheel/etc).
I definitely would not weld a tooth on. I am sure you could find a compatible flywheel to replace the bad one. May as well inspect the flex plate while you're in there, as it's a easy change with all that stuff off, and an annoying rattle if it's bad.
- waybomb
- CYO Moderator
- Posts: 2567
- Joined: February 5th, 2013, 9:24 pm
- Vessel Info: 1995 Boston Whaler Rage15
1987 3697 Carver Mariner
1988 Cougar 46 Kevlar Vee offshore
1969 15' Glasspar / 1967 Johnson Electromatic 85 - Location: Saint Joseph,Mi
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Re: Port engine flywheel missing a tooth
Fred
1969 Glaspar Avalon /1967 Johnson Electromatic 85
1987 Carver Mariner
1988 Cougar Kevlar 46' with triple blown 572 ci
1995 Boston Whaler Rage
Past - 1988 2807, 1989 4207 Aft
- bud37
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Re: Port engine flywheel missing a tooth

Now that said, you referred to selling the boat, maybe consider selling it as it is, test the market and avoid losing on the return on your repair investment. The one engine will still start with the new starter.
Good luck whatever you choose to do.....

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Re: Port engine flywheel missing a tooth
- Georgeviking
- Scurvy Dog
- Posts: 13
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- Vessel Info: 1995 390 cpmy
1978 32’ Uniflite sport sedan
1968 31’ ulrichsun
1968 31’ broad water
1977 19’ checkmate
1975 17’ west wind. - Location: Strong Island N,Y
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Re: Port engine flywheel missing a tooth
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