hail mary wrote:
and the mechanics did not see the flappers with the inspection camera and after 3 blown hoses I arrived here and got the answer and printed it and showed to mechanic. they took it all apart and cleared it out and there was the flappers as well as rust chunks from the previous exhaust risers that they had replaced. so now happy boating

Well they if they changed the exhaust hose, they would have seen that the flapper was not there, now the metal rod that it pivots on was still there, why did they not remove the drive and go looking for it? Did they think it just vaporized into thin air? Instead of depending on a hi-tech camera, they should be thinking based on logic, where would the missing flapper be?These flapper valves can get melted easily if the cooling water to the exhaust system gets cut off, either because of a bad impeller, or clogged risers. If you have an overheat, then you have to check these. Not only that, but the water tube gaskets in the drive can get melted in a severe overheat. When that happens, even if everything else is OK, you can get an overheat with the boat on plane because when the upper gear housing lifts out of the water, the leaky gaskets will suck in air.
When I had my overheat last summer, right away I ordered new flappers and water tube gaskets because I knew I'd be replacing them. One was melted on the metal rod, one was right in the middle of the exhaust housing at the bottom of the Y pipe.
And, I'm not even a trained boat mechanic. A self-taught do it yourselfer, 42 years worth.
So note to you all, if you have an overheat, make sure to check the flappers, if your engine has them.
And, like I said in earlier, get an IR temp gun and monitor the temps of your exhaust system. You will spot a problem in time that way. It should not be higher than 130-140*F after coming off plane and should be at about 100* idling. If you can't keep your hands on the risers they are too hot, because most people can't tolerate temps of over 140*.
If the mechanics water tested the boat on plane and monitored the exhaust system temperatures they would have known for sure that there was still a problem. A lot of that hot exhaust gas was not getting out so for sure it was hotter than normal.