'99 Johnson 130 OceanPro starts but then dies

trobinson017

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Sep 12, 2004
Messages
183
Hey all,

Last week when I took my boat out the engine started fine, but it stalled three times as I started pushing the throttle forward. After the third stall I got it running fine. I even cut the engine later to do some fishing and when it was time to go it fired right up, no stalling. Today, however, I can't get it to stay running. I had it warming up while was packing stuff for a boat ride and it sounded rough, not the normal smooth idling. I tried to give it a bit of gas but as soon as I moved the throttle forward it sputtered and died. Now I can't get it to run more than 10 seconds before it sputters and dies. I checked the fuel/water separator and the gas was clean. The fuel filter looks good too. The 63 gallon tank is about 3/4 full and I use Stabil with ethanol eliminator in the gas tank.

Any ideas on what might be wrong? What should I be looking for?
 

tashasdaddy

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
Nov 11, 2005
Messages
51,019
Re: '99 Johnson 130 OceanPro starts but then dies

start trouble shooting, compression and spark check, are you getting fuel. what do spark plugs look like.
 

trobinson017

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Sep 12, 2004
Messages
183
Re: '99 Johnson 130 OceanPro starts but then dies

Y'know, as I was researching how to do a compression test I kept thinking "this is acting just like water in the fuel before I got the w/f separator". Even tho I already checked that I went out and did another check. This time I took the fuel line off the engine block and pumped the fuel into a clear glass container. Sure enough, cloudy fuel. I don't know why my first check of the w/f separator showed clear gas, as did the fuel filter. I then recalled what a retired boat mechanic told me: I have a poly gas tank and, in Florida, the heat causes it to expand and contract a bit which down here almost always causes leakage from the fittings installed on the tank (i.e. hose fitting, level sender fitting, etc.). I checked the top of the tank and, sure enough again, there was some water setting there from the 2 weeks of daily storms we've had lately. How it got there is another issue that I have to fix. Anyway, I soaked up the water on the tank, then pumped out about 1.5 gals of milky gas until I got crystal clear gas. After reconnecting the fuel line I started her up. More sputtering and dying but I knew there was still fouled gas in the engine block so I kept turning it over. It ran longer and stronger every time until eventually it ran just fine. I took it for a short trip up/down the canal and no problems!

So, I'm confident that's the issue. But in my compression test research I learned you should do such a test every so often anyway to detect any problems before they happen. I may just do that anyway. Also, with your advice, TashasDaddy, I checked all my plugs and they looked fine, but the gap was off on one. The engine runs a tad smoother now after regapping it. Good advice!

Thanks again for your excellent help. I can always count on you!
 
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