Jason Edwards
Seaman
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2006
- Messages
- 54
Took the boat out to the lake this weekend with the new prop and high volume screens installed and this is what happened.
The prop worked amazingly well. Holeshot was awesome. All of my gear either slid or rolled to the back of the boat by the time the boat got on plane. The boat almost instantly seemed to get on plane. No loss of top speed was noticed and rpm increased to 5600 rpm from the previous 5000 I was getting with the raker 20P.
But I still have the problem with the check engine light and buzzer going on. It only happens when at WOT and max rpms. I initially thought that my motor was overheating and that was the reason for me installing the high volume water screens. I have been told that this alarm could also be due to a fuel restriction. I had my wife along with me for this trip (bless her soul), so we tried something to test this theory. She sat at the back of the boat and pumped the squeeze ball while we were traveling at WOT. The alarm never sounded until she said she couldn't pump the ball anymore because it practically went flat. When the ball wouldn't "rebound" or "inflate" anymore because the engine was comsuming so much fuel the engine alarm would go off every time.
Where would you start with this problem? I know the problem may be due a faulty anti-siphon valve but is there anything else that might be worth checking first? My fuel tank is a motherbear to get to and any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
The prop worked amazingly well. Holeshot was awesome. All of my gear either slid or rolled to the back of the boat by the time the boat got on plane. The boat almost instantly seemed to get on plane. No loss of top speed was noticed and rpm increased to 5600 rpm from the previous 5000 I was getting with the raker 20P.
But I still have the problem with the check engine light and buzzer going on. It only happens when at WOT and max rpms. I initially thought that my motor was overheating and that was the reason for me installing the high volume water screens. I have been told that this alarm could also be due to a fuel restriction. I had my wife along with me for this trip (bless her soul), so we tried something to test this theory. She sat at the back of the boat and pumped the squeeze ball while we were traveling at WOT. The alarm never sounded until she said she couldn't pump the ball anymore because it practically went flat. When the ball wouldn't "rebound" or "inflate" anymore because the engine was comsuming so much fuel the engine alarm would go off every time.
Where would you start with this problem? I know the problem may be due a faulty anti-siphon valve but is there anything else that might be worth checking first? My fuel tank is a motherbear to get to and any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.