Re: 2nd problem/questions from my first boat
Events that happened two days ago here in Cincinnati, on the Ohio river (four people dead when a barge hit a houseboat that was dead in the water) implore me to say this, you have a problem with your boat and you are new to boating....you should not be out on it untill this is solved!!!<br />Your first post indicated that you have a system wide loss of electrical power, this will not fix itself, and WILL happen again. Secondly, as others have pointed out, even if your boat is running right, you need to learn how to start it, it is much more "fussy" than a car is these days. <br />Here's the deal, most cars for the past 15 years or so are fuel injected, there is a computer telling the engine how much gas and air the engine needs to start, for the temperture it is at. Your boat does not have all of that. When the engine has not been run for several hours, it needs more gas and less air to start. YOU have to do that. This is all highly subjective, but the accepted practice is to pump the throttle one to three times, then set it at high idle and try the key. As soon as the engine starts running, bring the throttle back towards idle.....how much and how fast depends on the engines...you will need to learn a feel for this. You don't want a cold engine running at 2500 rpm's, but it might stall under 1200 for the first minute or two. Practice makes perfect. On the other hand, if the engine is warm and you shut it off for a few minutes, it should fire right up without pumping the throttle, in fact you may be flooding the engine(with too much gas) by pumping it at this point. I highly suggest, that you get an experienced boater, or even a paid captain to go out with you for a few hours, to help you learn some of these basics. A boat that is not running when it needs to be can be life threatening.