Hi all, I have a 1994 Mercury Offshore 3.0-Liter 225-H.P. carbureted 2-stroke outboard on my 21' Boston Whaler. There is a reservoir for 2-stroke oil under the boat's console; air pressure from the engine's crankcase flows into this reservoir via one hose, causing 2-stroke oil to flow out to the engine through a second hose.
Recently I've noticed a couple of problems that I suspect are related to pressure buildup in this system. First, oil has been leaking from the hose at the top of the reservoir and getting on the floor of the console, even though the hose appears to be fairly tightly connected and is in good shape. Second, I found 2-stroke oil had gotten into the plumbing around the primer bulb and water-fuel separator filter. This isn't coming from the gas tank (the gas there is clean), so the only way I can imagine it's getting there is that pressure in the 2-stroke oil system is pushing the oil through the oil injection pump within the engine and then it's exiting out the fuel inlet. Both of these symptoms suggest to me that there must be fairly significant pressure remaining in the 2-stroke system after we turn the engine off for the day.
As a temporary fix, I can loosen one of the filler caps on the oil reservoir under the console when we finish running in order to let off pressure. However, I'd like to figure out what's going on and fix it. Does this scenario suggest a failure of a particular component? Maybe a bad check valve somewhere? Thanks for any ideas.
Recently I've noticed a couple of problems that I suspect are related to pressure buildup in this system. First, oil has been leaking from the hose at the top of the reservoir and getting on the floor of the console, even though the hose appears to be fairly tightly connected and is in good shape. Second, I found 2-stroke oil had gotten into the plumbing around the primer bulb and water-fuel separator filter. This isn't coming from the gas tank (the gas there is clean), so the only way I can imagine it's getting there is that pressure in the 2-stroke oil system is pushing the oil through the oil injection pump within the engine and then it's exiting out the fuel inlet. Both of these symptoms suggest to me that there must be fairly significant pressure remaining in the 2-stroke system after we turn the engine off for the day.
As a temporary fix, I can loosen one of the filler caps on the oil reservoir under the console when we finish running in order to let off pressure. However, I'd like to figure out what's going on and fix it. Does this scenario suggest a failure of a particular component? Maybe a bad check valve somewhere? Thanks for any ideas.