Gas Giant
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2010
- Messages
- 239
Engine is a '63 Evinrude Big Twin 40hp, Model No. 43053. It has a '61 carb, fuel pump, and lower unit on it. Carb freshly rebuilt, ignition is new, and I just replaced the flywheel key because it was sheared when I got the motor. Had a tank of fresh 24:1 fuel too.
Okay, had the engine running good, so I decided to take the boat for a spin today. It was my first time in this boat, which is a little 14 foot Orlando Clipper. I warmed it up in a barrel before leaving the house, the engine gave no indication that it was unhappy.
Put it in the water at the boat ramp, and it was cranky - it didn't want to run for long. But I managed to get it going, and after a minute or two it was doing fine. Pulled away and gave it some gas, and it would rev up and speed the boat up, but then the engine would bog back down a few seconds later. If I slowly opened the throttle, it didn't bog down, and let me tell you, that little boat will straight out FLY with that 40 on it.
However, coming back to the boat ramp, I had to slow back down to idle in the manatee zone, and when I came back down off a plane, it sputtered and died. Wouldn't restart no matter what I did. No sputtering or anything, just cranking and cranking with no fire. I decided to save the battery for the electric trolling motor to get me home (I brought it for this exact reason
).
Well, after getting it home, it sat for a few hours while I recharged the battery. Went to start it, and it backfired out of the carb. My automotive experience tells me this is a timing issue, but not sure what it means with an outboard. I cranked it again, and it fired up, but it was idling fast. Couldn't find a reason why.
Shut it down, and started it again, and it was running, but backfiring out of the exhaust badly. I shut it off after a few seconds and stopped messing with it at this point.
So, I'm going to test compression again tomorrow to make sure something didn't go horribly wrong. (it was 100psi on each cylinder a week ago). But I am looking for ideas on what it could be. Could I have sheared a flywheel key again? I used an Evinrude flywheel key and torqued the flywheel nut to 105 ft-lbs when I replaced it last Friday.
Any ideas are appreciated. Not quite sure where to begin diagnosing, and driving that little water rocket is quite addicting.
Okay, had the engine running good, so I decided to take the boat for a spin today. It was my first time in this boat, which is a little 14 foot Orlando Clipper. I warmed it up in a barrel before leaving the house, the engine gave no indication that it was unhappy.
Put it in the water at the boat ramp, and it was cranky - it didn't want to run for long. But I managed to get it going, and after a minute or two it was doing fine. Pulled away and gave it some gas, and it would rev up and speed the boat up, but then the engine would bog back down a few seconds later. If I slowly opened the throttle, it didn't bog down, and let me tell you, that little boat will straight out FLY with that 40 on it.
However, coming back to the boat ramp, I had to slow back down to idle in the manatee zone, and when I came back down off a plane, it sputtered and died. Wouldn't restart no matter what I did. No sputtering or anything, just cranking and cranking with no fire. I decided to save the battery for the electric trolling motor to get me home (I brought it for this exact reason
Well, after getting it home, it sat for a few hours while I recharged the battery. Went to start it, and it backfired out of the carb. My automotive experience tells me this is a timing issue, but not sure what it means with an outboard. I cranked it again, and it fired up, but it was idling fast. Couldn't find a reason why.
Shut it down, and started it again, and it was running, but backfiring out of the exhaust badly. I shut it off after a few seconds and stopped messing with it at this point.
So, I'm going to test compression again tomorrow to make sure something didn't go horribly wrong. (it was 100psi on each cylinder a week ago). But I am looking for ideas on what it could be. Could I have sheared a flywheel key again? I used an Evinrude flywheel key and torqued the flywheel nut to 105 ft-lbs when I replaced it last Friday.
Any ideas are appreciated. Not quite sure where to begin diagnosing, and driving that little water rocket is quite addicting.