Opinions on the need for re-jetting 85 'Rude 90hp

Reggie08

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Mar 31, 2008
Messages
243
I'm hoping I can get some opinions on the need for re-jetting carbs for simple fact, I'm trying to determine if I have a need for it.

I have an 85 'Rude 90hp that I completely rebuilt the powerhead on. In the process I replaced the block because the old one was bored .030 over already and I had some pretty substantial scoring on the cylinder walls. The current block is bored .030 on three cylinders and .040 on the 4th (#3 cylinder to be exact). A local mechanic here told me I would probably need to re-jet because as he put it, "it'll idle like a 3 legged dog". His reason being, the cylinders were larger requiring more fuel/oil. Since re-accomplishing my link-n-sync, the motor idles very well/smooth in my opinion (better than the last 2 outboards I owned). So re-jetting for that purpose I think, is unnecessary. Another mechanic in the same shop suggested I bore the current jets out "4 thousandth's" which I'm uncomfortable with doing.

However, I'm concerned with the possibility of a lack of lubrication issue arising. Will the larger cylinders require me to have to re-jet up a size or two? My current jet size is 56c which is the standard size per the OEM manual/parts diagram.

I'm still in the break-in period and as such, I'm using a 25:1 mix (bypassed the VRO system) so lubrication right now shouldn't be an issue. But once the break-in period is over, I'll go back to a 50:1 mix. Should I considered re-jetting? Is there ever a time when re-jetting is necessary?
 

Dhadley

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Feb 4, 2001
Messages
16,978
Re: Opinions on the need for re-jetting 85 'Rude 90hp

It'll be fine as is provided it's functioning as it should. IE - carbs clean, ignition working correctly etc.

The weight on a .064" over piston is the same as a standard. There will be no balance issues. The guy you spoke to is obviously a 4 stroke guy, probably a car guy - not a 2 stroke outboard guy.

Fuel is introduced into the intake by the piston moving toward the head therefore pulling fuel thru the carb. A larger piston will, if anything, draw more fuel thru the carb.

Drilling the jets can (it's very possible) actually make the motor run leaner. Once you drill a jet you change the ramp angle on both ends. You also change the rifleing in the barrel of the jet.

Since you have a well idling motor with one hole only .010" larger (that's .005" on each side) you now have more experience on the subject than the "mechanic" you spoke to. Congrats!
 

Reggie08

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Mar 31, 2008
Messages
243
Re: Opinions on the need for re-jetting 85 'Rude 90hp

Thanks Dhadley!

The mechanic however is an outboard mechanic not a car mechanic.

The motor seems to run great. Following each trip with the boat to date, I pull the plugs just to see if they're ok and not fouling or appear to be running lean, etc.
 

F_R

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Jul 7, 2006
Messages
28,226
Re: Opinions on the need for re-jetting 85 'Rude 90hp

Goes to show a complete lack of understanding of how a carburetor works. Yes, if you were to put a 10hp carb on a 3hp, it wouldn't work because of the difference in cubic inches of air and fuel that it breathes.

However, here we are talking about increasing the displacement only about half a cubic inch for the whole engine. A miniscule amount as far as the carburetor sees it. Carburetors increase the fuel flow as the air flow increases, doing a pretty good job of maintaining the fuel/air ratio constant throughout the speed range.

I just crunched a bunch of numbers and found that your motor, bored at .010" and running at 600 rpm, breathes a total volume of fuel/air equal to a standard bore engine running at 604 rpm. Certainly, the carbs can handle that miniscule difference in fuel requirements. It isn't even the proverbial drop-in-the-bucket.
 
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