Every fall I fill both my tanks with fuel after adding fuel conditioner. I fill the tanks right to the filler spout, eliminating any air in the tanks. (Yes, my tank vents are working.)
Every spring, like clockwork, my 90 HP 4-stroke Mercury loses power and stumbles on the first run. I change the RACOR fuel filter, and it runs fine for the rest of the season. I tried changing the RACOR before the first run, but it clogged with water and I wound up changing two filters, so now I just wait for the old one to clog up.
Two things puzzle me. One: where am I picking up the water? The tanks are full; no room for condensation. Two: why does this only happen once a season? I have two fuel tanks, so should the filter not clog again when I switch to the second tank?
I suspect the A-10 in the fuel may be the culprit. But where is it absorbing water, when the tank is right full? This fall I think I'll drain the tanks and refill them with premium fuel that as no A-10 additive. A tad expensive, but no more so than buying a RACOR every year.
Any thoughts or suggestions much appreciated.
Every spring, like clockwork, my 90 HP 4-stroke Mercury loses power and stumbles on the first run. I change the RACOR fuel filter, and it runs fine for the rest of the season. I tried changing the RACOR before the first run, but it clogged with water and I wound up changing two filters, so now I just wait for the old one to clog up.
Two things puzzle me. One: where am I picking up the water? The tanks are full; no room for condensation. Two: why does this only happen once a season? I have two fuel tanks, so should the filter not clog again when I switch to the second tank?
I suspect the A-10 in the fuel may be the culprit. But where is it absorbing water, when the tank is right full? This fall I think I'll drain the tanks and refill them with premium fuel that as no A-10 additive. A tad expensive, but no more so than buying a RACOR every year.
Any thoughts or suggestions much appreciated.