jdaghir
Seaman Apprentice
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2010
- Messages
- 45
I recently acquired a 1975 24' Riveria Cruiser pontoon. It's powered by a 1975 Evinrude 70 hp outboard, long shaft, mechanical shift, model 70573E. After doing some work on it, it starts easily, idles smoothly and accelerates well. However, it tops out at 3200 rpm and around 12 MPH per GPS at WOT, which is well below the 5000 to 5500 rpm it is supposed to do.
It is currently propped with a 3 blade aluminum prop, 13" diameter x 19" pitch, in moderate but not perfect condition. The motor is mounted in the middle of its height adjustment and the anti-ventilation plate rides about 2-3" under the surface of the water at WOT. I occasionally get a small amount of ventilation when I hit chop or waves.
The pontoon has an aluminum hard top on it and it looks like it has been re-floored with 3/4 pressure treated plywood, along with having homemade benches/seats from 3/4" treated. It also has a house battery, a start battery and a trolling battery, a trolling motor along with both a 6 gallon and a 20 gallon fuel tank, so I suspect it weighs more than it did from the factory. After a day in the water the logs do have a small amount of water in them, maybe a pint each (they have bungs in them allowing them to be checked and drained).
I've checked the compression and all three cylinders were within a few pounds of each other and in the low 100's (don't recall the exact numbers).
I had one weak ignition coil so I replaced it and all three cylinder now jump a 7/16" gap with a spark tester.
I ran a can of Seafoam mixed with a gallon of gas through it in an attempt to decarb it. Both tanks have fresh gas with some Seafoam in them.
I rebuilt the fuel pump, however it is actually a fuel pump from a 2004-2009 40-90 hp. I assumed that since it is for the same horsepower range it should supply sufficient fuel. Pumping the fuel bulb at WOT does not change the speed. The fuel bulb and hoses appear to be in good shape.
I cleaned and rebuilt all three carbs including replacing the high speed orifices as all three had been stripped by the previous owner (had to use a screw extractor to get them out - luckily the threads in the float body weren't damaged).
I did a link & sync following the factory manual. I found it a little confusing at first as the procedures were somewhat spread throughout the manual. Basically I did the following:
I set the WOT timing at 17 degrees as specified in the manual by using the Joe Reeves method and verified it by using a timing light while a friend piloted the boat at WOT. It was set higher, around 22 degrees or so. The timing base seems to move smoothly without sticking both when moved by hand and by the throttle.
I'm at somewhat of a loss as to what to do from here. I'm guessing it needs a different prop but 2000 rpm seems to be a lot to pick up with just a lower pitched prop and I would like to be certain the motor is running as it should be before throwing money at new props. Should I raise the motor to the top set of holes even though I already ventilate occasionally? Should I replace the fuel pump with the correct one for this year? Should I pull the intake off and examine the reed valves? Did I do the link & sync properly? Is there something else I'm missing?
Sorry for the long post but I wanted to provide as much detail as possible, hoping some of you with more experience would be able to make some suggestions.
Thanks in advance for sharing your knowledge and wisdom!
-
Jeff
It is currently propped with a 3 blade aluminum prop, 13" diameter x 19" pitch, in moderate but not perfect condition. The motor is mounted in the middle of its height adjustment and the anti-ventilation plate rides about 2-3" under the surface of the water at WOT. I occasionally get a small amount of ventilation when I hit chop or waves.
The pontoon has an aluminum hard top on it and it looks like it has been re-floored with 3/4 pressure treated plywood, along with having homemade benches/seats from 3/4" treated. It also has a house battery, a start battery and a trolling battery, a trolling motor along with both a 6 gallon and a 20 gallon fuel tank, so I suspect it weighs more than it did from the factory. After a day in the water the logs do have a small amount of water in them, maybe a pint each (they have bungs in them allowing them to be checked and drained).
I've checked the compression and all three cylinders were within a few pounds of each other and in the low 100's (don't recall the exact numbers).
I had one weak ignition coil so I replaced it and all three cylinder now jump a 7/16" gap with a spark tester.
I ran a can of Seafoam mixed with a gallon of gas through it in an attempt to decarb it. Both tanks have fresh gas with some Seafoam in them.
I rebuilt the fuel pump, however it is actually a fuel pump from a 2004-2009 40-90 hp. I assumed that since it is for the same horsepower range it should supply sufficient fuel. Pumping the fuel bulb at WOT does not change the speed. The fuel bulb and hoses appear to be in good shape.
I cleaned and rebuilt all three carbs including replacing the high speed orifices as all three had been stripped by the previous owner (had to use a screw extractor to get them out - luckily the threads in the float body weren't damaged).
I did a link & sync following the factory manual. I found it a little confusing at first as the procedures were somewhat spread throughout the manual. Basically I did the following:
- Removed the throttle cable from the throttle lever.
- Loosened the cam roller screw and moved the cam roller away from the cam.
- Loosened the carb throttle link fastener screws, allowing the throttle valves to completely close via spring pressure.
- Tightened the throttle link fastener screws to synchronize the throttle valves.
- Adjusted the throttle stop screw so that the throttle valves were horizontal and fully open at WOT.
- Confirmed that the timing pointer aligned with the 0 degree mark on the flywheel with #1 cylinder at TDC.
- Set the throttle cam yoke to an initial position of 4-31/32" on the throttle rod.
- Attached a timing light to the #1 cylinder and adjusted the idle speed adjustment screw so that the timing was at 0 degrees while in neutral and running in the water.
- Moved the cam roller into contact with the cam, and adjusted the throttle cam yoke position so that the lower mark on the cam lined up with the center of the roller, and then tightened the cam roller screw.
- Readjusted the idle speed adjustment screw so that the motor ran at about 780 rpm while in gear, idling in the water.
- Adjusted the throttle cable so that it applied light pressure to the throttle lever to ensure that it fully returns to the idle speed adjustment screw and reattached the cable.
- Adjusted the warm up lever stop screw in the control unit so that the cam roller aligned with the start mark on the cam when the warm up lever was raised.
I set the WOT timing at 17 degrees as specified in the manual by using the Joe Reeves method and verified it by using a timing light while a friend piloted the boat at WOT. It was set higher, around 22 degrees or so. The timing base seems to move smoothly without sticking both when moved by hand and by the throttle.
I'm at somewhat of a loss as to what to do from here. I'm guessing it needs a different prop but 2000 rpm seems to be a lot to pick up with just a lower pitched prop and I would like to be certain the motor is running as it should be before throwing money at new props. Should I raise the motor to the top set of holes even though I already ventilate occasionally? Should I replace the fuel pump with the correct one for this year? Should I pull the intake off and examine the reed valves? Did I do the link & sync properly? Is there something else I'm missing?
Sorry for the long post but I wanted to provide as much detail as possible, hoping some of you with more experience would be able to make some suggestions.
Thanks in advance for sharing your knowledge and wisdom!
-
Jeff
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