halmc
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2008
- Messages
- 231
Brace yourselves. In an earlier thread I described how my engine runs nicely, but from time to time, and todate, inexplicably, drops 2-300 RPM, then takes off again. Um, unless I take the cover off.
Take the cover off the engine and it runs peachy. No rpm drop at any rpm range. Runs like a new one.
BUT (and that's a big butt) put the cover back on and it's same ole, same ole.
So: along I go, with cover on, engine starts to lose rpm gradually (over two or three seconds) then suddenly drops maybe 300rpm, does NOT cough, then back to normal. Until next time.
Cover off: no issues.
I have taken the cover on and off maybe fifty times over about 28 hrs of running time.
I've never heard of carburetor icing on any marine engine. But the symptoms are absolutely identical to those on a light airplane when carburetor icing is experienced.
And I'll be cussed if I can figure how the engine cover would enhance carb icing -- in fact, seems like it would inhibit it.
Hithereto, I have used fuel with "up to" 10% ethanol.
Observations?
(the air passage through the cover is unobstructed; nothing on the cover touches any part of the powerhead, other than the bottom cowling; there are no modifications to the intake path; the engine never quits; with the cover off, the engine runs perfectly.
Why me?
Take the cover off the engine and it runs peachy. No rpm drop at any rpm range. Runs like a new one.
BUT (and that's a big butt) put the cover back on and it's same ole, same ole.
So: along I go, with cover on, engine starts to lose rpm gradually (over two or three seconds) then suddenly drops maybe 300rpm, does NOT cough, then back to normal. Until next time.
Cover off: no issues.
I have taken the cover on and off maybe fifty times over about 28 hrs of running time.
I've never heard of carburetor icing on any marine engine. But the symptoms are absolutely identical to those on a light airplane when carburetor icing is experienced.
And I'll be cussed if I can figure how the engine cover would enhance carb icing -- in fact, seems like it would inhibit it.
Hithereto, I have used fuel with "up to" 10% ethanol.
Observations?
(the air passage through the cover is unobstructed; nothing on the cover touches any part of the powerhead, other than the bottom cowling; there are no modifications to the intake path; the engine never quits; with the cover off, the engine runs perfectly.
Why me?