Re: 1984 Mercury 115 looses Cylinder
Did the mechanic find aluminum being thrown off the piston crown onto the spark plug? If that's the basis for his conclusion that you are "losing" #2 cyl, you may need to readjust the ign timing. You may be losing material off the piston due to detonation.<br /><br />The timing on an ADI motor should be no more than around 18-19 deg BTDC when checked at cranking speed. Regardless of what the sticker on the motor says.<br /><br />You must also use a good grade of non-alcohol fuel, as blended fuels will run leaner and lead to detonation.<br /><br />The carbs should also be checked for blockages in the jets (pull the float bowl cover and check the needle/seat, pull the main jet plug in the front of the carb and blow air thru the carb's passages), as restricted fuel flow will of course cause a lean condition.<br /><br />Remove the float bowl vent jets as they cause the motor to lean out in the midrange, for economy. Unfortunately, with the fuel quality nowadays, it usually leads to piston problems. These vent jets are brass with a screwdriver slot, located on the outside of the carb where you can see them, in the top of the float bowl cover. You will absolutely not hurt anything by removing these jets. You may use a bit more fuel at midthrottle, but that's better than burning your motor up!!!<br /><br />Another mandatory thing to do, if your motor has an Idle Stabilizer module, Remove It Now! This thing was a band-aid effort by Merc to settle out the I-6's idle speed characteristics, but when they fail, they advance the timing and cause detonation/destruction of the innards. Better to adjust the carbs a bit rich for best hole-shot response, and jack up the idle speed a hair so she'll not die when placed in gear.<br /><br />HTH, if your mechanic can't give you a concrete reason for his conclusion, find another one who knows Inlines! You can do this stuff yourself with the help of places like this, and a good manual such as the Seloc mercury book.<br /><br />Good Luck........ed