It was dark brown, so mostly rust.
Yes, I think Salt Away should be the routine in the future. I installed the genset 21 years ago, and the lack of use some years is not the best way to treat it, but that's the way it's been.
It does get a flush with antifreeze each winter, but the understanding I have gained through this experience has made me wonder about the efficacy of that, at least the way I've done it several times. With the thermostat closed (as it would be when cold), no coolant (being the antifreeze) would have been drawn into the engine. I'm thinking now that it would be better to winterize the genset when it is warmed up, and I have at times in the past if an oil change had been needed. But several times I've winterized with the engine cold, so I now figure the antifreeze would not have entered the engine at all!
I've never had any freeze damage. Have I been lucky? Perhaps here on the southern Chesapeake it hasn't gotten cold enough long enough to freeze. Inside its cocoon, inside the engine room, perhaps it is shielded enough from the cold. But...and here is the my full disclosure: my attraction to trawlers caused me to join your forum several years ago, but I don't own one! I own a sail catamaran! The engines and the genset are set back in the sterns, isolated from whatever little warmth is in the cabin and mostly above the waterline.
Of the several forums I'm a member of, yours was the only one that had a thread relative to my problem. I hope you guys don't mind my barging in!
The other question; the orings are rubber, and the old ones have been rather flattened. But there seems to be less material there than with what I bought (16mm OD, 10mm ID). I have only the cylinder with me now, and there is no recess in the surface around the tubes that make up the water passages , so I will need to check the head to see if there is a recess in it. Maybe Ron can provide orings certain to fit.
This has certainly been a learning experience for me! Next will be finding out how difficult it will be to get the piston and rings back into the cylinder.