Hi all,
I have an 85' sea ray, with a 470 , 3.7Liter 170 hp 4 cylinder mercruiser. Last year was the overhall year. New: Starter, fuel pump, rebuilt carb, coil, points, wires, rotor, cap, plugs, battery. The short of it is it has never run better. This year was no exception.....until Monday. We drove about a have hour to our destination (30mph, not hard). Hung out at the beach 4 hours or so, 15 minutes of that with the radio on. Went to start it and got a sputtering noise from the starter or solenoid like a low battery or there wasn't enough juice to push the bendix. It's not the norm but it has happened a couple other times this year. However, if I wait ten minutes it seems to recover and fires up. This time was no exception. I fired it up and sat idling for about 5 minutes and watched the voltmeter top off between 13 and 14 as usual. Upon pulling the anchor and lowering the outdrive it stalled almost like a run out of gas stall. I tried again, it fired but quickly stalled again. I never got it running again. It cranks, but does not even give an indication it wants to start.
$100 tow bill and I sit with a dead boat.
Things I noticed trying to diagnose. My fuel pump is new but fo giggles II pulled the fuel line to the carb and cranked the motor and it does spurt fuel.
While I have not done a compression test, I pulled all the plugs and cranked the motor. No water and air blowing out of the hole.
The oil is clean with no water. The fuel is new.
The last few times taking the boat out I notice a black soot on my transom after a day out and wiping it down. It meant nothing to me until I tested for spark and it appeared to be weak (yellow/pink) Now it's my belief that perhaps the combustion might be incomplete causing this soot????
I have since replaced the condensor and points which resulted in no change. (they were new last season)
I'm kind of a dim wit when it comes to testing electrical or ignition components nor do I have the equipment. I want to do this myself so if anyone has experienced a sudden death of a well running boat perhaps you could provide me some insight. Perhaps there is a kill switch wire I am unaware of. Again, the boat is old but has been awesome.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. If you need more info let me know.
Kurt
I have an 85' sea ray, with a 470 , 3.7Liter 170 hp 4 cylinder mercruiser. Last year was the overhall year. New: Starter, fuel pump, rebuilt carb, coil, points, wires, rotor, cap, plugs, battery. The short of it is it has never run better. This year was no exception.....until Monday. We drove about a have hour to our destination (30mph, not hard). Hung out at the beach 4 hours or so, 15 minutes of that with the radio on. Went to start it and got a sputtering noise from the starter or solenoid like a low battery or there wasn't enough juice to push the bendix. It's not the norm but it has happened a couple other times this year. However, if I wait ten minutes it seems to recover and fires up. This time was no exception. I fired it up and sat idling for about 5 minutes and watched the voltmeter top off between 13 and 14 as usual. Upon pulling the anchor and lowering the outdrive it stalled almost like a run out of gas stall. I tried again, it fired but quickly stalled again. I never got it running again. It cranks, but does not even give an indication it wants to start.
$100 tow bill and I sit with a dead boat.
Things I noticed trying to diagnose. My fuel pump is new but fo giggles II pulled the fuel line to the carb and cranked the motor and it does spurt fuel.
While I have not done a compression test, I pulled all the plugs and cranked the motor. No water and air blowing out of the hole.
The oil is clean with no water. The fuel is new.
The last few times taking the boat out I notice a black soot on my transom after a day out and wiping it down. It meant nothing to me until I tested for spark and it appeared to be weak (yellow/pink) Now it's my belief that perhaps the combustion might be incomplete causing this soot????
I have since replaced the condensor and points which resulted in no change. (they were new last season)
I'm kind of a dim wit when it comes to testing electrical or ignition components nor do I have the equipment. I want to do this myself so if anyone has experienced a sudden death of a well running boat perhaps you could provide me some insight. Perhaps there is a kill switch wire I am unaware of. Again, the boat is old but has been awesome.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. If you need more info let me know.
Kurt