Hi. I'm a newbie on this forum, and a relative newbie to boating in general.
I have a '79 Mercury 1500 that runs great until it is allowed to idle when not trimmed to sit level. It's on a '79 Champion Super V bass boat. The boat really wants the motor trimmed all the way down when starting out, in order to come up on plane as quickly as possible. Because of the angle of the transom, and the boat's far-back cockpit position, this means the motor is actually tilted far down in back.
If the motor is trimmed all the way down, and I allow it to idle there too long before opening the throttle, it floods and "loads up," and never gets power. "Too long" is about how long it takes to trim it down. I usually have to back off the throttle, then trim the motor up until it is level. Then it will power up and go just fine. Trouble is, when it's trimmed up like that, the boat wants to stand on its tail, and it takes way too long to come up on plane.
If it makes a difference, the motor has a hydrofoil stabilizer installed (looks like a Doelfin brand), and the previous owner removed the baffles from the exhaust.
A friend who had one of these motors told me that this is "nature of the beast" for Mercury motors. He says he has a 225 horse Merc that acts the same way.
It seems to me that it's getting too much fuel like this. I have checked the float levels, and they are right on spec.
It's hard for me to believe that Mercury would let this be "nature of the beast," or they would lose sales. I'll check any and all suggestions.
I have a '79 Mercury 1500 that runs great until it is allowed to idle when not trimmed to sit level. It's on a '79 Champion Super V bass boat. The boat really wants the motor trimmed all the way down when starting out, in order to come up on plane as quickly as possible. Because of the angle of the transom, and the boat's far-back cockpit position, this means the motor is actually tilted far down in back.
If the motor is trimmed all the way down, and I allow it to idle there too long before opening the throttle, it floods and "loads up," and never gets power. "Too long" is about how long it takes to trim it down. I usually have to back off the throttle, then trim the motor up until it is level. Then it will power up and go just fine. Trouble is, when it's trimmed up like that, the boat wants to stand on its tail, and it takes way too long to come up on plane.
If it makes a difference, the motor has a hydrofoil stabilizer installed (looks like a Doelfin brand), and the previous owner removed the baffles from the exhaust.
A friend who had one of these motors told me that this is "nature of the beast" for Mercury motors. He says he has a 225 horse Merc that acts the same way.
It seems to me that it's getting too much fuel like this. I have checked the float levels, and they are right on spec.
It's hard for me to believe that Mercury would let this be "nature of the beast," or they would lose sales. I'll check any and all suggestions.