I have Mercury Force 90 outboard (2-stoke). Takes very long to actually start. I'm wondering if I'm doing something wrong myself. I have never owned a boat prior to this one, and only had this one running for about 4 months now. I pump the primer 2-3 times and try to start. Regardless of where I have the choke, the starter only engages for a split second. I can move the starter freely so it doesn't look seized to me. The boat sat for 5 years prior to me getting it. The carbs have been cleaned. New fuel filter and spark plugs put in. I just wanted to take the "operator error" aspect out of it before I do any electrical troubleshooting. I understand the starter should stay engaged until the cylinders fire up. It was my assumption that it would crank for more than a split second. Usually takes me 10-15 minutes to actually start. Should I be priming it more? I appreciate any input.
I have moved this question from another forum, and to add, the starting battery is new, I have a permanent charger installed on the boat so they batteries are always charged. I did try starting it with a jumper pack attached thinking the new battery was junk, and same result. All cables on battery and motor are tight.
I have moved this question from another forum, and to add, the starting battery is new, I have a permanent charger installed on the boat so they batteries are always charged. I did try starting it with a jumper pack attached thinking the new battery was junk, and same result. All cables on battery and motor are tight.