Hi All,
I recently aquired a 1958 Sea King GG8977A. I need some pointers on the next steps to take.
Here is what I have done so far:
Replaced spark plugs, cleaned carb, replaced fuel lines, drained and refilled propeller lube
I have a few questions.
First is the fast and slow knobs. The problem I have is that the slow knob hole is stripped, so I need to somehow replace it. I know that to properly start it, the knobs have to be turned to the correct number. The second problem is that I have no idea where position "1" is. When I turn the screws that go into the carb, there is no stop, it just keeps rotating, so how do I determine where the "1" position is. Since I assume that these determine the richness of the mix that goes in?
Second problem. I have been able to start the motor for at longest 10 seconds, then it dies. If it turned out to be a bad fuel pump, how do I replace it? Do I have to somehow hunt down the old parts? Or are there modern parts made for it?
Thanks for any ideas, especially on the fast slow knobs.
- John
I recently aquired a 1958 Sea King GG8977A. I need some pointers on the next steps to take.
Here is what I have done so far:
Replaced spark plugs, cleaned carb, replaced fuel lines, drained and refilled propeller lube
I have a few questions.
First is the fast and slow knobs. The problem I have is that the slow knob hole is stripped, so I need to somehow replace it. I know that to properly start it, the knobs have to be turned to the correct number. The second problem is that I have no idea where position "1" is. When I turn the screws that go into the carb, there is no stop, it just keeps rotating, so how do I determine where the "1" position is. Since I assume that these determine the richness of the mix that goes in?
Second problem. I have been able to start the motor for at longest 10 seconds, then it dies. If it turned out to be a bad fuel pump, how do I replace it? Do I have to somehow hunt down the old parts? Or are there modern parts made for it?
Thanks for any ideas, especially on the fast slow knobs.
- John