Got my engine (5.7L Chevy) running on muffs, timed her up, and did a cam break-in (just in case, because a couple of lifters got mixed up during the rebuild) and splashed the boat today. It took about 10 min of idle speed to get out of the no-wake zone, and I hated every second of it, because low-speed's no good for new engine break-in.
My wife was piloting, because she has more boating experience than I.
Literally 10 feet short of the no wake buoys, we went to throttle up a little, and as soon as she touched the throttle, it died. Wouldn't re-start no matter how I coaxed it. It got real close a couple of times, but eventually drained the battery. Ended up getting towed back in. Got a couple of "been there" comments from folks passing by while we got towed (and a lot of looks that said the same). Once we were back on dry land we headed home in shame.
Took her home, and after about 5 min. of cranking, got it to fire up and idle just fine. Still dies as soon as you give it much throttle. I can ease into it, and get it up around 2500 RPM, but any sudden throttle change, and it dies. Gonna try a new coil and wires (the coil wire is pretty shot). Since the problem didn't come around until the engine was pretty hot, I'm thinking the coil might be the culprit.
My reasoning is that a weak coil could have enough juice to give a good idle, but as soon as it sees more fuel, it creates too much resistance for it to spark, and stalls out? I've seen it before on some vehicles, but this was all old technology by the time I started wrenching, so it's not something I've dealt with a lot.
Same story with carbs--before my time. It's got a Q-Jet carb, and a buddy who's pretty familiar with 'em said the carb probably doesn't need a rebuild, as long as the accelerator pump is still good? It works just fine; pump the throttle, and the primaries get a good strong spray of fuel.
I hooked the fuel line straight up to a gas can with brand-new gas in it, to see if it would make a difference, and it still ran the same, so I know it's not bad gas. I even went to the effort of draining the water separator so that it would be all fresh gas going into the carb.
Anybody else got any suggestions for what it might be? The engine was getting warm from idling for so long, but it wasn't "hot" by any means. I wish my gauges actually showed real temp numbers, but it's just got a green zone. It was about 85% up in the green zone...
My wife was piloting, because she has more boating experience than I.
Literally 10 feet short of the no wake buoys, we went to throttle up a little, and as soon as she touched the throttle, it died. Wouldn't re-start no matter how I coaxed it. It got real close a couple of times, but eventually drained the battery. Ended up getting towed back in. Got a couple of "been there" comments from folks passing by while we got towed (and a lot of looks that said the same). Once we were back on dry land we headed home in shame.
Took her home, and after about 5 min. of cranking, got it to fire up and idle just fine. Still dies as soon as you give it much throttle. I can ease into it, and get it up around 2500 RPM, but any sudden throttle change, and it dies. Gonna try a new coil and wires (the coil wire is pretty shot). Since the problem didn't come around until the engine was pretty hot, I'm thinking the coil might be the culprit.
My reasoning is that a weak coil could have enough juice to give a good idle, but as soon as it sees more fuel, it creates too much resistance for it to spark, and stalls out? I've seen it before on some vehicles, but this was all old technology by the time I started wrenching, so it's not something I've dealt with a lot.
Same story with carbs--before my time. It's got a Q-Jet carb, and a buddy who's pretty familiar with 'em said the carb probably doesn't need a rebuild, as long as the accelerator pump is still good? It works just fine; pump the throttle, and the primaries get a good strong spray of fuel.
I hooked the fuel line straight up to a gas can with brand-new gas in it, to see if it would make a difference, and it still ran the same, so I know it's not bad gas. I even went to the effort of draining the water separator so that it would be all fresh gas going into the carb.
Anybody else got any suggestions for what it might be? The engine was getting warm from idling for so long, but it wasn't "hot" by any means. I wish my gauges actually showed real temp numbers, but it's just got a green zone. It was about 85% up in the green zone...