I have replaced the following...
New fuel hoses 5/16" (previous owner did this 6 months ago) up to a brand new water fuel separator (Sierra 10 microns 90 gph), then 3/8" fuel line up to a brand new primer bulb, through a completely rebuilt fuel pump (diaphragm/check valves/gaskets) then into my three freshly cleaned carbs.
I have removed the gas fill cap, and vent hose from the fitting and blown through the vent hose and there is no restriction because the air come shooting out of the fill hole. I have reconnected the vent hose and blown through the gas fill hole and it comes out the vent screen just fine.
Boat is a 1984 Proline 20 center console and the fuel tank is about 6" below the deck. 5/16" fuel line is about 6' long to the fuel/water filter. The fuel connector on the 1500 is about 14" above the deck, and the top carb is about 33" above the top of the fuel tank.
My problems...
Walk out to the boat and squeeze the primer ball about 6 full times before it gets hard
Don't do anything for about 60 seconds and the bulb is not stiff anymore and requires another squeeze or two
Leave it for 10 minutes and you have to squeeze it 5-6 more times because the fuel has back flowed out of the fuel lines
Put the boat in the water and 1/8 throttle for about 15-20 minutes while you get out of the minimal wake zone and everything is great. Punch it and she rockets out of the hole for about 30 seconds and then bogs because not enough fuel is getting to the carbs. Squeeze the bulb a couple times every 20 seconds and she will scream along just great until you reduce throttle or stop squeezing the bulb.
My tinkering...
Bypass the fuel/water filter and run straight to the primer bulb and everything is exactly the same but you don't have to squeeze the bulb as often. However if you don't squeeze the bulb, she bogs and is starving for fuel.
My diagnosis is that there is just too much of a height difference between the fuel tank and carbs that the diaphragm fuel pump just can't keep up with the demand.
Questions...
Is there anything else fuel related that I have not replaced that could be causing this problem?
Should the fuel be able to back flow out of the lines as quickly as it does?
New fuel hoses 5/16" (previous owner did this 6 months ago) up to a brand new water fuel separator (Sierra 10 microns 90 gph), then 3/8" fuel line up to a brand new primer bulb, through a completely rebuilt fuel pump (diaphragm/check valves/gaskets) then into my three freshly cleaned carbs.
I have removed the gas fill cap, and vent hose from the fitting and blown through the vent hose and there is no restriction because the air come shooting out of the fill hole. I have reconnected the vent hose and blown through the gas fill hole and it comes out the vent screen just fine.
Boat is a 1984 Proline 20 center console and the fuel tank is about 6" below the deck. 5/16" fuel line is about 6' long to the fuel/water filter. The fuel connector on the 1500 is about 14" above the deck, and the top carb is about 33" above the top of the fuel tank.
My problems...
Walk out to the boat and squeeze the primer ball about 6 full times before it gets hard
Don't do anything for about 60 seconds and the bulb is not stiff anymore and requires another squeeze or two
Leave it for 10 minutes and you have to squeeze it 5-6 more times because the fuel has back flowed out of the fuel lines
Put the boat in the water and 1/8 throttle for about 15-20 minutes while you get out of the minimal wake zone and everything is great. Punch it and she rockets out of the hole for about 30 seconds and then bogs because not enough fuel is getting to the carbs. Squeeze the bulb a couple times every 20 seconds and she will scream along just great until you reduce throttle or stop squeezing the bulb.
My tinkering...
Bypass the fuel/water filter and run straight to the primer bulb and everything is exactly the same but you don't have to squeeze the bulb as often. However if you don't squeeze the bulb, she bogs and is starving for fuel.
My diagnosis is that there is just too much of a height difference between the fuel tank and carbs that the diaphragm fuel pump just can't keep up with the demand.
Questions...
Is there anything else fuel related that I have not replaced that could be causing this problem?
Should the fuel be able to back flow out of the lines as quickly as it does?
Last edited: