Cutting out at high rpm

lof54

Cadet
Joined
Aug 22, 2008
Messages
18
Motor is Evinrude 1989 60 horse with vro still connected. Motor starts great and runs great pretty much all the time. Sometimes when I run up on plane at about 5000rpms I will be going along and she just cuts out for a second almost like you turned it off. The motor doesn't stall and just picks up right where it was. I have a inline filter before on the outside of the motor and changed that and all the fuel line hose from tank to motor and it still does it. Like said the motor starts and runs great except for these hiccups. It only does it when I am up on plane and running at higher rpms and it really just like you hit something you stop so fast then right back running. I am thinking of taking the fuel tank out and seeing if there is stuff in it but you would think the inline filter would have stuff in it. Open to all ideas and I changed the plugs before last trip and it still did it. Thanks in advance for any ideas.\


Clark:confused:
 

Joe Reeves

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Feb 24, 2002
Messages
13,262
Re: Cutting out at high rpm

Have you had the lower unit off recently/ If so, you may have the shift rod out of adjustment. The engine is jumping out of..... and right back into gear. A thorough explanation of jumping out of gear follows.

(Jumping Out Of Gear - Manual Type)
(J. Reeves)

This pertains to lower units on all OMC manual shift outboard engines, or any OMC engine with lower units defined as a Shift Assist or a Hydro Electric Shift unit which incorporates a "Shifter Clutch Dog".

Within the lower unit, splined to the prop shaft is what is most often referred to as a clutch dog, hereafter simply called dog. The dog has at least two lobes protruding from it on both ends, facing both forward and reverse gear. The forward and reverse gears also have lobes built into them near their center area. When the engine is running, in neutral, the gears are spinning constantly via the driveshaft being connected directly to the powerhead crankshaft, but the propeller does not turn due to the fact that the dog is centered between the two gears, and the dog lobes are not touching either of the gear lobes.

When the unit is put into either gear, shift linkages force the dog (and its lobes of course) to engage the lobes of the gear. The lobes of the spinning gear grab the lobes of the dog, and since the dog is splined to the prop shaft, the propeller turns.

The lobes of the dog and gears are precisely machined, most with right angled edges that could be installed in either direction, and some with angles slightly varied that must be installed in one direction only (one end only must face the propeller). Dogs that can be installed in one direction only, if reversed, even if the dog and both gears were new.... would jump out of gear almost immediately. Keep in mind that the lobes are precisely machined with sharp angles!

Due to improper adjustment or worn shift linkages, but usually due to improper slow shifting, those precisely machined sharp edges of the lobes become slightly rounded. Now, with those lobes rounded, as the rpms increase, the pressure of the gear lobes upon the dog lobes increases to a point whereas they are forced apart (jumping out of gear), and due (usually) to the shift cable keeping tension on the engines shift linkages..... the unit is forced back into gear giving one the sensation that the engine has hit something, and the cycle continues.

Some boaters with manual shift engines have the mistaken belief that shifting slowly is taking it easy on all of the shifting components..... Wrong! Shifting slowly allows those precisely machined sharp edges of the dog and gears to click, clank, bang, slam against each other many times before they are finally forced into alignment with each other..... and this is what rounds those edges off! The proper way to shift is to snap the unit into gear as quickly as possible.
 

jonesg

Admiral
Joined
Feb 22, 2008
Messages
7,198
Re: Cutting out at high rpm

I would watch the tach to see if the needle drops to zero, it could be loosing ignition momentarily.
 

lof54

Cadet
Joined
Aug 22, 2008
Messages
18
Re: Cutting out at high rpm

I will try to run it and watch the tach, any way to check those gears to see if they are slipping. I dont know what it is but I will check everything. I had poured a little sea foam in the tank about a week before this all happened. That is the first time I ever used it and heard it was good stuff. My question is would that have loosened stuff in the tank enough to cut off fuel completely to the motor for the second. It just is frustrating because boat ran great and then this. But I will keep checking one thing at a time and see if I can track it down.

Thanks, Clark
 

tashasdaddy

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
Nov 11, 2005
Messages
51,019
Re: Cutting out at high rpm

is it like you hit a log, does it make any noise?
 

lof54

Cadet
Joined
Aug 22, 2008
Messages
18
Re: Cutting out at high rpm

There really is no noise, just like someone turns the motor off for a split second. The motor does not stall and just picks up right where it left off but usually I quickly throttle down and try to see what happened. And then take off again and it might not do it the rest off the day.
 
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