Hey guys I have a 2001 4.3L LH Mercruiser that I just picked up. The boat and engine look very clean and either meticulously maintained or very low hours (no hour meter). I'm having problems with the engine just stopping, I've replaced the fuel filter, and it is still happening. What should I check next?
Back story:
I was only able to do a short test drive, but the seller started from cold just fine, and I was able to drive it out on the lake for 5 minutes or so before it started raining and we had to head back to the pier, but other than stalling when shifting in to reverse during initial launch from the pier everything seemed great so I bought the boat.
So the next nice day I ran her on the muffs in the drive way wanting to make sure nothing happened during a longer run time. She fired right up, and once she was running for 10 minutes or so and I was confident that oil pressure and engine temp were stable I went in to the house to just let her run for a while, I wanted to let her run for a while before I took the family out on the real water, but after a few minutes in the house I heard the rpms drop, then the engine just stopped. (the boat came with 3/4 of a 41 gallon tank of gas)
I went out and it took a few cranks and coughs but it started back up and ran fine. But the problem persists the engine will run fine, but it always eventually stops. The amount of time it runs before stopping varies from 5 to 30 minutes. Being confident that it will always restart I took it out to the lake today and she ran beautifully at all speeds. So I opened her to full throttle for some cruising and after about 10-15 minutes of perfect operation she just stopped running and came to a stop. All gauges look great and stable while running. Good oil pressure, good temp etc.
After stopping out on the lake she restarted after some cranking and coughs, and the first climb through the rpms she kind of stumbled, but after that and we were back in business. I cruised around at various speeds for another 20 minutes and it didn't happen again.
Knowing my boat will eventually stall out on me takes a good bit of the joy out of having a boat. My next idea is to jump the oil switch next time out to see if that stops the problem. Is this common symptom of a bad oil pressure switch? I see lots of posts but none really explaining the common symptoms other than when it is totally dead. What about a bad fuel pump?
My biggest fear is of course a cracked block or leaking exhaust manifolds...but this doesn't seem like that right?
Thanks for listening, and thanks for any ideas in advance.
Nate
Back story:
I was only able to do a short test drive, but the seller started from cold just fine, and I was able to drive it out on the lake for 5 minutes or so before it started raining and we had to head back to the pier, but other than stalling when shifting in to reverse during initial launch from the pier everything seemed great so I bought the boat.
So the next nice day I ran her on the muffs in the drive way wanting to make sure nothing happened during a longer run time. She fired right up, and once she was running for 10 minutes or so and I was confident that oil pressure and engine temp were stable I went in to the house to just let her run for a while, I wanted to let her run for a while before I took the family out on the real water, but after a few minutes in the house I heard the rpms drop, then the engine just stopped. (the boat came with 3/4 of a 41 gallon tank of gas)
I went out and it took a few cranks and coughs but it started back up and ran fine. But the problem persists the engine will run fine, but it always eventually stops. The amount of time it runs before stopping varies from 5 to 30 minutes. Being confident that it will always restart I took it out to the lake today and she ran beautifully at all speeds. So I opened her to full throttle for some cruising and after about 10-15 minutes of perfect operation she just stopped running and came to a stop. All gauges look great and stable while running. Good oil pressure, good temp etc.
After stopping out on the lake she restarted after some cranking and coughs, and the first climb through the rpms she kind of stumbled, but after that and we were back in business. I cruised around at various speeds for another 20 minutes and it didn't happen again.
Knowing my boat will eventually stall out on me takes a good bit of the joy out of having a boat. My next idea is to jump the oil switch next time out to see if that stops the problem. Is this common symptom of a bad oil pressure switch? I see lots of posts but none really explaining the common symptoms other than when it is totally dead. What about a bad fuel pump?
My biggest fear is of course a cracked block or leaking exhaust manifolds...but this doesn't seem like that right?
Thanks for listening, and thanks for any ideas in advance.
Nate