Greetings
I have a 1983 Chrysler/force 85 HP outboard. I just picked this up from an old guy who couldn't get it running this year (It was running fine last year). He didn't bother fixing it and sold it to me as is.
The model number is a 856XC3L...three cylinder engine.
I checked the compression... 150 pounds on all 3 cylinders..
Changed the plugs, tested for spark...good spark on all three.
After cranking it a bit, It started then stalled right away, and backfired a lot. I pulled the plugs, and noticed the top two were pristine...with not a drop of fuel on them...yet the bottom one was dark a bit, which leads me to beleive it was running on the bottom cylinder only(Hence the backfiring).
Pulled the carbs off, did a complete rebuild....
Pulled the fuel pump off, cleaned+ changed the membrane and gaskets.
Started cranking again...same problem! I put my hand over the carb mouth while someone was cranking, and the carbs don't seem to be sucking much air...
No gas getting to the top two carbs... I'm now thinking it could be the reed valves. I pulled the carbs off, took the intake off and removed the reeds.... the motor comes with 10 reeds per cylinder (5 top, 5 bottom)
Here's my question...how does one know a reed valve is working properly?
When I had just the carbs off, I turned the crank and was able to see the top and bottom reeds opening and closing on the non firing cylinders...but the reeds on the bottom were not...
But I pulled the reeds off, and none are damaged, and I can open them all when I push gently on them with an eraser....so none of them are stuck.
I'm thinking this could be a bad gasket on the intake manifold, between the reeds and the carbs. When I had everything assembled and was cranking, I did see some fuel leaking out at the bottom of the manifold...and when I pulled it off , the gasket was in sad shape.
Do you think just the gasket change will do the trick? Or do you guys think I need new reed valves...if not, any ideas as to what could be causing this fuel shortage to two cylinders?
Thanks!
I have a 1983 Chrysler/force 85 HP outboard. I just picked this up from an old guy who couldn't get it running this year (It was running fine last year). He didn't bother fixing it and sold it to me as is.
The model number is a 856XC3L...three cylinder engine.
I checked the compression... 150 pounds on all 3 cylinders..
Changed the plugs, tested for spark...good spark on all three.
After cranking it a bit, It started then stalled right away, and backfired a lot. I pulled the plugs, and noticed the top two were pristine...with not a drop of fuel on them...yet the bottom one was dark a bit, which leads me to beleive it was running on the bottom cylinder only(Hence the backfiring).
Pulled the carbs off, did a complete rebuild....
Pulled the fuel pump off, cleaned+ changed the membrane and gaskets.
Started cranking again...same problem! I put my hand over the carb mouth while someone was cranking, and the carbs don't seem to be sucking much air...
No gas getting to the top two carbs... I'm now thinking it could be the reed valves. I pulled the carbs off, took the intake off and removed the reeds.... the motor comes with 10 reeds per cylinder (5 top, 5 bottom)
Here's my question...how does one know a reed valve is working properly?
When I had just the carbs off, I turned the crank and was able to see the top and bottom reeds opening and closing on the non firing cylinders...but the reeds on the bottom were not...
But I pulled the reeds off, and none are damaged, and I can open them all when I push gently on them with an eraser....so none of them are stuck.
I'm thinking this could be a bad gasket on the intake manifold, between the reeds and the carbs. When I had everything assembled and was cranking, I did see some fuel leaking out at the bottom of the manifold...and when I pulled it off , the gasket was in sad shape.
Do you think just the gasket change will do the trick? Or do you guys think I need new reed valves...if not, any ideas as to what could be causing this fuel shortage to two cylinders?
Thanks!