goodmariner85
Seaman
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2023
- Messages
- 53
I have an Evinrude 90hp 1990. I've been working on the boat on land for a few weeks. It has run pretty well for the most part. A pop and stutter now and then at low rpms (on land pretty much all I do) especially when not really warm.
I have started it and adjusted things many times over the past few weeks, including today a few times. I bolted the air silencer cover on and when I started it, it sounded bad, would not keep running at idle speed. I pulled each plug wire. Pulling number 3 wire had no effect. As I played with it over the next hour, sometimes it seemed like there was a very slight bit of power from number 3.
I swapped two coil packs. No difference. The coil pack seems ok.
I swapped two plugs. No difference.
I swapped the wires from the coil pack to the plugs. No difference. Plug wires seem ok.
I manipulated the wires including from power pack while running to see if something might be loose or damaged, but did not notice anything.
I tried an inline spark plug tester. I got a light, but it looked a bit erratic. [EDIT managed to start it again. The light does not look erratic to me, steady flashing as far as I can tell]. I've never used one before, so I'm not sure. I tried to put a spark tester on both the bad cylinder and a good one to compare. But I have been unable to start the motor for some time. I suppose I can try just cranking. I'd really like to compare the sparks.
A mouse had chewed the insulation on one wire from the power pack to the coil pack on the bad cylinder. I repaired it weeks ago, seemed ok. I had to add a small length of wire because there was no slack. The repair is with two shrink tube / solder connectors. Later I found this paint on goop that hardens into insulation. This would have been perfect. Too late. I am contemplating cutting it and using crimp / heat shrink connectors. But if the voltage is already very high in this wire, I wonder if the current is more sensitive to the quality of the connection and if it may burn. I doubt this is causing the problem right now, but I don't know.
Compression was around 125 on all four cylinders last summer. I remeasured when I started this spring on land. I got 110, 114, 112, 110. Checked again a couple of days later and got 115, 120, 110, 119. I don't have an explanation for this (both were measured with a cold engine at 60 degrees air temp) The bad cylinder is number three, with 110 psi.
An important point: Even when the engine was running "well" I noticed that pulling the plug on number three showed that it had significantly less power than the others, but still had some. This has been the case since I started working on it a few weeks ago.
I did a link and sync a couple of days ago, including the Joe Reeves method. High speed timing was off by about 2 degrees. I corrected it. The low speed timing was not off by much. It was hard to correct because I found it difficult to set the throttle to when the carbs just begin to open and measure the timing at the same time. But I got close I think. The engine seemed to run fine after the link and sync. A few hitches during the first few minutes of running.
The question is what to look at next?
I have started it and adjusted things many times over the past few weeks, including today a few times. I bolted the air silencer cover on and when I started it, it sounded bad, would not keep running at idle speed. I pulled each plug wire. Pulling number 3 wire had no effect. As I played with it over the next hour, sometimes it seemed like there was a very slight bit of power from number 3.
I swapped two coil packs. No difference. The coil pack seems ok.
I swapped two plugs. No difference.
I swapped the wires from the coil pack to the plugs. No difference. Plug wires seem ok.
I manipulated the wires including from power pack while running to see if something might be loose or damaged, but did not notice anything.
I tried an inline spark plug tester. I got a light, but it looked a bit erratic. [EDIT managed to start it again. The light does not look erratic to me, steady flashing as far as I can tell]. I've never used one before, so I'm not sure. I tried to put a spark tester on both the bad cylinder and a good one to compare. But I have been unable to start the motor for some time. I suppose I can try just cranking. I'd really like to compare the sparks.
A mouse had chewed the insulation on one wire from the power pack to the coil pack on the bad cylinder. I repaired it weeks ago, seemed ok. I had to add a small length of wire because there was no slack. The repair is with two shrink tube / solder connectors. Later I found this paint on goop that hardens into insulation. This would have been perfect. Too late. I am contemplating cutting it and using crimp / heat shrink connectors. But if the voltage is already very high in this wire, I wonder if the current is more sensitive to the quality of the connection and if it may burn. I doubt this is causing the problem right now, but I don't know.
Compression was around 125 on all four cylinders last summer. I remeasured when I started this spring on land. I got 110, 114, 112, 110. Checked again a couple of days later and got 115, 120, 110, 119. I don't have an explanation for this (both were measured with a cold engine at 60 degrees air temp) The bad cylinder is number three, with 110 psi.
An important point: Even when the engine was running "well" I noticed that pulling the plug on number three showed that it had significantly less power than the others, but still had some. This has been the case since I started working on it a few weeks ago.
I did a link and sync a couple of days ago, including the Joe Reeves method. High speed timing was off by about 2 degrees. I corrected it. The low speed timing was not off by much. It was hard to correct because I found it difficult to set the throttle to when the carbs just begin to open and measure the timing at the same time. But I got close I think. The engine seemed to run fine after the link and sync. A few hitches during the first few minutes of running.
The question is what to look at next?
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