Hi Guys,
I briefly searched through the forums but couldn't find anything so I apologize if this is a duplicate.
I had my Merc 3.0 Alpha 1 professionally winterized and just put the boat in the water for the first time this past weekend and then again yesterday. It starts fine (actually better than it ever did!), but when I go to accelerate, for a fast acceleration, it chokes up and sometimes dies altogether. When it doesn't die, it either eventually picks up fine or we pull back and go for a slow acceleration in which there's no issue. After we got on land yesterday, I looked at the outer control arm on the lower speed throttle and it was loose - the lynchpin was in but the arm was maybe 3/8" above the lever (?) on the engine. So I pushed it down but there didn't seem to be anything that would prevent it from rising right back up.
I was hoping I just had to run some fuel through the lines but after two days and 12ish miles it doesn't seem to be. Any ideas?
The painfully slow start really makes for sore legs on a slalom ski, sigh.
Pictures tonight if that will help.
Thank you!
I briefly searched through the forums but couldn't find anything so I apologize if this is a duplicate.
I had my Merc 3.0 Alpha 1 professionally winterized and just put the boat in the water for the first time this past weekend and then again yesterday. It starts fine (actually better than it ever did!), but when I go to accelerate, for a fast acceleration, it chokes up and sometimes dies altogether. When it doesn't die, it either eventually picks up fine or we pull back and go for a slow acceleration in which there's no issue. After we got on land yesterday, I looked at the outer control arm on the lower speed throttle and it was loose - the lynchpin was in but the arm was maybe 3/8" above the lever (?) on the engine. So I pushed it down but there didn't seem to be anything that would prevent it from rising right back up.
I was hoping I just had to run some fuel through the lines but after two days and 12ish miles it doesn't seem to be. Any ideas?
The painfully slow start really makes for sore legs on a slalom ski, sigh.
Pictures tonight if that will help.
Thank you!