This morning we went down to take out my 21-foot center console for the first time in five weeks. The 1994 Merc Offshore 3.0L 225HP carbureted 2-stroke engine started normally. Just after we pulled out of the slip, the engine died. At this point it had run for a total of about 1 minute. After this the starter motor would crank, but the engine wouldn't start up.
While looking things over, I noticed one important point. The last time we used the boat five weeks ago, I got interrupted when I was running freshwater through the engine at the end of the day, and I forgot to reinstall the plug on the fitting in the bottom cowl where the garden hose is attached during flushing (I don't use muffs, but instead connect the hose to the back of the engine). I found the plug in my toolkit and screwed it in. After this, however, the engine still wouldn't start.
I'll be going back down to the boat in a few days to work on diagnosing this. In preparation, I wanted to ask the following:
1) Would the lack of water pressure due to the plug in the cooling system not being installed cause the engine to shut itself down?
2) If so, what could account for the fact that the engine wouldn't start after the plug was replaced? Could several attempts to restart it have caused the engine to flood?
The gas tank incidentally is about half-full, and I verified that the bulb in the fuel line stiffened normally and was putting out clean gas. There is also plenty of 2-stroke oil in the outboard's reservoir. No alarms (such as overheating alarm) sounded while running or trying to restart the engine. Thanks for any ideas.
While looking things over, I noticed one important point. The last time we used the boat five weeks ago, I got interrupted when I was running freshwater through the engine at the end of the day, and I forgot to reinstall the plug on the fitting in the bottom cowl where the garden hose is attached during flushing (I don't use muffs, but instead connect the hose to the back of the engine). I found the plug in my toolkit and screwed it in. After this, however, the engine still wouldn't start.
I'll be going back down to the boat in a few days to work on diagnosing this. In preparation, I wanted to ask the following:
1) Would the lack of water pressure due to the plug in the cooling system not being installed cause the engine to shut itself down?
2) If so, what could account for the fact that the engine wouldn't start after the plug was replaced? Could several attempts to restart it have caused the engine to flood?
The gas tank incidentally is about half-full, and I verified that the bulb in the fuel line stiffened normally and was putting out clean gas. There is also plenty of 2-stroke oil in the outboard's reservoir. No alarms (such as overheating alarm) sounded while running or trying to restart the engine. Thanks for any ideas.