waterinthefuel
Commander
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2003
- Messages
- 2,728
The last two times I went on my parents houseboat, we got towed back. The engine will start and run fine, we get about 15 minutes from the dock and it quits like someone turned off the switch. It's dead as a stump. The tach works perfectly the entire time and the boat will not restart on the lake. My dad took some of his friends from work out on it between our two trips where we got towed, and it ran perfectly. The kill switch is not the problem, it's not touched. He said he noticed the voltmeter on the dash acting up right before it died.
What can it be? Is it the power pack? The stator? I thought if you cooked a stator its cooked, it doesn't uncook later for another trip out.
I was reading and I think the way my dad has the engine wired up is an issue. He has two large deep cycle batteries to operate the systems on the boat. Well, that engine is hooked to one of those batteries, but the batteries are hooked together. He usually only operates the houseboat at a low RPM which I was told causes the stator to get really hot since it's a low RPM and a high charge requirement. I was told the charging system on an outboard is only to be used for maintenance charging, i.e. charging a small cranking battery back up after its used to start the engine and that's it, not to charge 2 deep cycle marine batteries hooked in parallel. What do you think?
What can it be? Is it the power pack? The stator? I thought if you cooked a stator its cooked, it doesn't uncook later for another trip out.
I was reading and I think the way my dad has the engine wired up is an issue. He has two large deep cycle batteries to operate the systems on the boat. Well, that engine is hooked to one of those batteries, but the batteries are hooked together. He usually only operates the houseboat at a low RPM which I was told causes the stator to get really hot since it's a low RPM and a high charge requirement. I was told the charging system on an outboard is only to be used for maintenance charging, i.e. charging a small cranking battery back up after its used to start the engine and that's it, not to charge 2 deep cycle marine batteries hooked in parallel. What do you think?
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