evinrude81
Seaman Apprentice
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2006
- Messages
- 30
Well, as promised took it out today on a friends boat and up and down the river, running for a cumulative 2 hours in 3 stretches. Seemed to work very well and started right up (without choke being needed - well, it was a warm and pleasant day here in the San Francisco Bay area).
All went well for except for one thing that I think I puzzled out but would like confirmation. All ran very well for a while, perhaps 40 mins at various throttle speeds, then it mysteriously cut out, as if it had run out of gas. It was easy to restart and it did this several times so I was getting a bit concerned that perhaps the float, being cork, had decided to get saturated with fuel having been dry for ten years or so.
Anyway, I richened the mixture progressively (it was running fairly lean), and after a couple of adjustments, the problem went away and took it off for another 40 min motor down the river to confirm, where it continued to run very nicely.
So just wanted to confirm with you guys - I think the problem I observed was because I had it set too lean. Would I be correct?
Getting very close to some cosmetic improvements!
Thanks again,
Mark
All went well for except for one thing that I think I puzzled out but would like confirmation. All ran very well for a while, perhaps 40 mins at various throttle speeds, then it mysteriously cut out, as if it had run out of gas. It was easy to restart and it did this several times so I was getting a bit concerned that perhaps the float, being cork, had decided to get saturated with fuel having been dry for ten years or so.
Anyway, I richened the mixture progressively (it was running fairly lean), and after a couple of adjustments, the problem went away and took it off for another 40 min motor down the river to confirm, where it continued to run very nicely.
So just wanted to confirm with you guys - I think the problem I observed was because I had it set too lean. Would I be correct?
Getting very close to some cosmetic improvements!
Thanks again,
Mark