Re: 1986 Force 85hp Won't start
I actually followed your advice, Bowhuntrrl, and got a mechanic to look at the engine. His reading came out better than mine 100, 120, 100. He removed all three cabs and clean them up and put them back up. When we cranked the engine again I could see gas flew to cabs but the piston didn?t suck it in. We then opened the head to see what is inside and he said the pistons and cylinders looked okay. No signs of damage. The head casket is new, but the previous owner didn?t machine the head before putting the new gasket on (very cheap workmanship). Anyhow the mechanic thinks the problem is the crankshaft or its bearings. I didn?t want him to go any further as the cost is very substantial. I thought I can do it myself. I have 5 yrs car mechanic experience and some tools. I bought the Manuel on-line. So what do you think? Is it doable? or most cost effective?
I am hoping to narrow down the problem so I know what to look for. One thing that I am sure of the problem is not electrical and it is well inside the engine.
Honestly, wait until your manual comes (I hope it's not the ones on CD from Ebay), hopefully a Clymer. Read it through and try to assess whether or not you feel up to the task. I really don't put a lot of faith in what your mechanic said about the crankshaft and bearings. It still has compression problems, even with his readings. The variance is too high between cylinders, and the compression is still borderline.
At this point, you really have nothing to lose and a lot to gain by learning yourself. I started in auto dealerships 40 years ago. I've also worked in a Harley dealership and a marina. I usually learn something new every day, it's never too late to learn something new.
I would plan on pulling the head off, take a real good look at the cylinders for scuffing. If you see some then you will need to either hone them or get them honed out. A ball hone will work but not take any material off and make good crosshatches. Then put in some new rings, put it all together and see where you are at.
Let us know when you get your manual and I'm sure some of us here will try to walk you through it a step at a time.
Remember, you need 3 things for an engine to run: compression, spark, and fuel. If you're getting spark and fuel, that only leaves one thing:compression.