Now, I know (1) electric choke it 5-10 times (2) squuze the fuel primer bulb until firm (3) push the throttle level to high (forward) by lifting the lever on the remote control,(4) press in and hold the key for a few seconds to crank the motor.
BTW, this is pretty much wrong.
(1) squeeze the fuel primer bulb until firm
(2) push the throttle level to high (forward) by lifting the lever on the remote control
(3) press in and hold in while turning key at the same time
The carbs need to be the same. Don't go by the tags - go by what's on the carb body and what jets you've got. The carb body should have the venturi size cast into the face. And, no, having 115 carbs on your 90 will NOT make it a 115. The 115 has much larger intake and exhaust ports. Actually, putting 115 carbs on a 90 without changing anything else will likely make the motor run poorly due to over fueling.
The carbs need to be the same. Don't go by the tags - go by what's on the carb body and what jets you've got. The carb body should have the venturi size cast into the face. And, no, having 115 carbs on your 90 will NOT make it a 115. The 115 has much larger intake and exhaust ports. Actually, putting 115 carbs on a 90 without changing anything else will likely make the motor run poorly due to over fueling.
Uh, mine is a 1982 very old 2 cycle model - J90MLCNB. I thought the older Johnson and Evinrude were made with the same or almost similar manifold to save. I was looking on eBay for carb and many stated their carbs are good for 90, 115 even 140? Maybe the efficiency is not noticeable when you put the 115 carbs on 90 motor for example. My Johnson 90 can go up to 30 miles an hour pretty quickly and never tried anything beyond that. I have a 1974 17-foot wellcraft trip-hull airslot 165 sport. My motor can go about 2-3 miles per gallon. It differs when I go up river or down river. never really tested the true mileage of my motor.
ok, back again. I installed the carbs without replacing needle valve or removing it from its seat. The carbs were still leaking so I am going to remove the carb again and find the leaking problem. Maybe buy rebuild kits and replace float bowl, needle valve, etc. What a silly DIY?
Did the new needle & seat stop the leak?
Motor could be cranking a little faster IMO.
I noticed during cranking what sounded like a high tension short to ground, tick, tick, tick, tick.
(Not the clunking sound of the primer solenoid)
You might want to track down that ticking noise, listen for it while cranking my hearing is not that good at 10,000 Miles away.