Trampstamp
Cadet
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2020
- Messages
- 8
Hi all,
So I've read a handful of the posts, and I think it might come down to carbureator TLC, but I'd appreciate some input from more experience wrenches, as this is mostly new territory for me.
Working on a 1995 2 stroke, 3 cyl, 90 hp ELPTO. In the process of buying the boat from a friend. He always maintained the boat and motor very well, but it had been sitting for about 7 years. I've pulled and cleaned the fuel tank, ran new fuel lines, new plugs, compression tests on all three cylinders right at 119 lb. put in a new impeller, new battery, and will be servicing the lower unit soon.
Hooked her up, fuel primed up great, (and once I realized I was cranking with the kill switch off), she started right up! She jumps to life with a 6 second choke and half throttle, and holds idle no problem. I know these motors are known to be not the smoothest idle in the world, but there seems to be a slight miss both at idle and continuous through the rev up to ~3000+ rpm. I have not had a chance to put her in the water (still waiting on some trailer hub parts), but I'm pretty confident she's just a step or two away from perfection.
I'm currently running 50:1 premix in the gas tank, and I assume the oil injection if working properly based upon its history of good maintenance and careful operation (drained old oil, put in new stuff). Basically, I'm treating it as a new "break-in" procedure since it had been sitting so long. It certainly doesn't seem smoky, she pees like a race horse, I just think her purr could be a little smoother.
I've pulled off the front of the air box, and peered thru the reeds, nothing jumps out as "dirty", but I figure attacking it with a little carb cleaner would be the next step. Should I pull the base of the air box to get to the carbs, or would shooting some cleaner through the throttle bodies be sufficient? Is the roughness an artifact of the extra oil that (I assume) is running through the system? Should I just let her idle for several minutes to see if it works itself out? Is there some other little idiosyncracy I don't know about???
Any further insights would be sincerely appreciated! Thanks much,
Dan
So I've read a handful of the posts, and I think it might come down to carbureator TLC, but I'd appreciate some input from more experience wrenches, as this is mostly new territory for me.
Working on a 1995 2 stroke, 3 cyl, 90 hp ELPTO. In the process of buying the boat from a friend. He always maintained the boat and motor very well, but it had been sitting for about 7 years. I've pulled and cleaned the fuel tank, ran new fuel lines, new plugs, compression tests on all three cylinders right at 119 lb. put in a new impeller, new battery, and will be servicing the lower unit soon.
Hooked her up, fuel primed up great, (and once I realized I was cranking with the kill switch off), she started right up! She jumps to life with a 6 second choke and half throttle, and holds idle no problem. I know these motors are known to be not the smoothest idle in the world, but there seems to be a slight miss both at idle and continuous through the rev up to ~3000+ rpm. I have not had a chance to put her in the water (still waiting on some trailer hub parts), but I'm pretty confident she's just a step or two away from perfection.
I'm currently running 50:1 premix in the gas tank, and I assume the oil injection if working properly based upon its history of good maintenance and careful operation (drained old oil, put in new stuff). Basically, I'm treating it as a new "break-in" procedure since it had been sitting so long. It certainly doesn't seem smoky, she pees like a race horse, I just think her purr could be a little smoother.
I've pulled off the front of the air box, and peered thru the reeds, nothing jumps out as "dirty", but I figure attacking it with a little carb cleaner would be the next step. Should I pull the base of the air box to get to the carbs, or would shooting some cleaner through the throttle bodies be sufficient? Is the roughness an artifact of the extra oil that (I assume) is running through the system? Should I just let her idle for several minutes to see if it works itself out? Is there some other little idiosyncracy I don't know about???
Any further insights would be sincerely appreciated! Thanks much,
Dan