DeanHensler
Petty Officer 3rd Class
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2013
- Messages
- 82
I've got a 1992 Evinrude 9.9 that I just purchased. The guy I bought it from ran it in a tank for me and it appeared to run just fine. I got it home and after few weeks of waiting for the weather to clear up, I hooked it up to my boat (this is an electric start, remote controlled motor).
When I got it all hooked up, I gave the primer bulb a few pumps until firm and turned the key to start the motor. It fired right up and ran for about 5 seconds, then died. I then hit the primer bulb again and cranked and cranked and cranked it. It would not start again. After cranking it forver with no start, I decided to pull a spark plug. The plug was very black and wet. I took the other plug out and the same thing. Fouled black and really wet. I cranked the motor a few times with no plugs in it to blow out all the fuel. Lots of mist came out. I blew on the plugs to dry them as much as possible and put them back in the motor. Cranked it and it started again, then died pretty quick. I performed the same procedure again but this time I opend the throttle up quite a bit when starting it. Now it started and ran, but when i lowered the throttle back to idle it would die again.
At this point I made a trip to the parts store to get some fresh spark plugs. After installing those the motor fired right up and would run at high throttle. I even put the motor in gear and throttled up. It will run all day throttled up. When I lower it back to idle it dies. When I checked the new spark plugs after running, they are wet too. It seems like the motor is getting too much fuel and the plugs are getting wet when its at idle speed.
Does this sound right?
How do I adjust the air/fuel mixture? I notied a knob on the front of the motor that appears to be an ajustment screw for the carb. Which way is more or less fuel?
When I got it all hooked up, I gave the primer bulb a few pumps until firm and turned the key to start the motor. It fired right up and ran for about 5 seconds, then died. I then hit the primer bulb again and cranked and cranked and cranked it. It would not start again. After cranking it forver with no start, I decided to pull a spark plug. The plug was very black and wet. I took the other plug out and the same thing. Fouled black and really wet. I cranked the motor a few times with no plugs in it to blow out all the fuel. Lots of mist came out. I blew on the plugs to dry them as much as possible and put them back in the motor. Cranked it and it started again, then died pretty quick. I performed the same procedure again but this time I opend the throttle up quite a bit when starting it. Now it started and ran, but when i lowered the throttle back to idle it would die again.
At this point I made a trip to the parts store to get some fresh spark plugs. After installing those the motor fired right up and would run at high throttle. I even put the motor in gear and throttled up. It will run all day throttled up. When I lower it back to idle it dies. When I checked the new spark plugs after running, they are wet too. It seems like the motor is getting too much fuel and the plugs are getting wet when its at idle speed.
Does this sound right?
How do I adjust the air/fuel mixture? I notied a knob on the front of the motor that appears to be an ajustment screw for the carb. Which way is more or less fuel?