TOHATSU GURU
Admiral
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2004
- Messages
- 6,164
Re: Newbie Problem/New Tohatsu 9.8 motor
"If there was something wrong with the carb, such as varnished passages, then it came from the factory that way. I have videos of the first start and the thing running poorly from the get go. The poster above had similar issues and a shop performed the procedure for him with success."
Yes and no. The engines are test run at the factory. More than once I have seen a new engine with some residual fuel left in the carb. I have also seen a variety of metal shavings, rubber and plastic in a new carb....That's why new engines have a warranty. But, screwing around with the air mixture screw is 100% not the way to correct the problem. Cleaning the carburetor or even replacing the carburetor(under warranty) is the correct method. Tweaking the air mixture screw, even if it does temporarily mask the actual problem, is only a short term or bumpkin fix. You or I can't argue with success, but "success" should be measured as solution without an unnecessary penalty. In this type of case that penalty is the wasting of fuel, violation of federal law and the voiding of warranty. Of course, the Feds will never do anything, Tohatsu will almost certainly still honor the warranty and the amount of fuel wasted is slight. I'm just a strong believer in correcting the problem rather than masking it.
"If there was something wrong with the carb, such as varnished passages, then it came from the factory that way. I have videos of the first start and the thing running poorly from the get go. The poster above had similar issues and a shop performed the procedure for him with success."
Yes and no. The engines are test run at the factory. More than once I have seen a new engine with some residual fuel left in the carb. I have also seen a variety of metal shavings, rubber and plastic in a new carb....That's why new engines have a warranty. But, screwing around with the air mixture screw is 100% not the way to correct the problem. Cleaning the carburetor or even replacing the carburetor(under warranty) is the correct method. Tweaking the air mixture screw, even if it does temporarily mask the actual problem, is only a short term or bumpkin fix. You or I can't argue with success, but "success" should be measured as solution without an unnecessary penalty. In this type of case that penalty is the wasting of fuel, violation of federal law and the voiding of warranty. Of course, the Feds will never do anything, Tohatsu will almost certainly still honor the warranty and the amount of fuel wasted is slight. I'm just a strong believer in correcting the problem rather than masking it.