sutor623
Rear Admiral
- Joined
- May 23, 2011
- Messages
- 4,089
So check it out guys. Two weeks ago I made a post about my motor starting fine on muffs, and then when I took 'er to the lake she would not start. When I got home I could barely get it to start, but it didnt idle until I ran 1 gallon of seafoam and gas through the motor at partial throttle. Changed the main power wire to starter, installed fuel/water separator, and treated the gas with water removing iso-heet. Motor then ran again on muffs, and in a small bucket (didn't sit in the water as much as it would on the lake) and did very well.
I took the boat out today, and it had a little bit of a tough time starting in the morning. (Took about three or four key cranks.) Once she started, she would run well, but ALMOST idle. If I tried to get her to idle, she would die out. But I ran her on the lake all day, and if I kept the revs up just a bit, no problem. Now, if the motor was warm, it would idle, and start up immediately, but after idling for a few, it would die out.
It was suggested to do a leak down test, but the motor pushed the 600lb. boat 34mph with 4 200lb. people, and few hundred pounds of gear. The compression is great, and I doubt highly that it would fail a leak down. Should I invest in a leak-down tester and rule that out, or should I point my finger directly at 45 year old carbs with original fuel lines that probably has some varnish in the low speed jet?
I took the boat out today, and it had a little bit of a tough time starting in the morning. (Took about three or four key cranks.) Once she started, she would run well, but ALMOST idle. If I tried to get her to idle, she would die out. But I ran her on the lake all day, and if I kept the revs up just a bit, no problem. Now, if the motor was warm, it would idle, and start up immediately, but after idling for a few, it would die out.
It was suggested to do a leak down test, but the motor pushed the 600lb. boat 34mph with 4 200lb. people, and few hundred pounds of gear. The compression is great, and I doubt highly that it would fail a leak down. Should I invest in a leak-down tester and rule that out, or should I point my finger directly at 45 year old carbs with original fuel lines that probably has some varnish in the low speed jet?