Overheating at wide-open throttle but not at idle usually points to a restriction or capacity issue in the cooling system — not a total failure. The raw water pump might still be working, but something in the system can’t keep up with the higher heat load at speed. Figuring it out means looking beyond the impeller and into the entire path water takes after it enters the hull.
Because everything looks fine at low RPM, many boat owners assume the impeller is good, the hoses are clear, and the issue must be electrical. But most flow-related issues only show up under higher demand — when the engine produces more heat, and the cooling system needs to move much more water to keep up.
If your engine runs hot only at speed, don’t assume the problem is solved because it cools down at idle. That’s your warning: the system is barely keeping up — and it’s failing when the engine works the hardest. Whether it’s a collapsing hose, a clogged heat exchanger, or an air leak that only opens under high vacuum, the solution starts with understanding that your cooling system is under pressure — and not just the kind that shows up on a gauge.
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