Seawolf_504
Cadet
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2010
- Messages
- 11
I have a 1998 90HP Force in good shape, but have been having, what I think, are fuel related issues.
Same ol story, Purchased the boat used and it is in pretty good shape. At time of purchase engine cranked up fine and idled on a hose no problem.
First couple times out in the boat everything was fine, but then started having issues getting the engine to turn over, maintain idle (cranks up but soon stalls out), and running out of sync or vibrating at max throttle as if one cylinder is not firing correctly. You can back the throttle down a little and engine smooths out, but doesn't produce enough pwer to get up on plane.
I've tried replacing all the fuel lines internally and externally, replaced entire fuel/water sep assembly with bigger 10 micron filter, have tried sea foam, new plugs, etc. After every replacement or fix I run it on hose and it runs perfect. Get it to the ramp and it runs ok at first, but then gradually starts having the same symptoms.
Boat was purchased with a full tank of fuel and owner says he always used stabil and proper oil mix. I pulled several fuel samples on the inlet side of filter and fuel has no sediment or water. It's also the correct tint showing proper fuel/oil mix.
I have managed to run the majority of the fuel out, but still have about 1/4 left. My gut tells me it's carb related and I need to rebuild them. My question to you guys is does this sound like a carb issue to you?
The thing that bugs me is the fact that after I replaced hoses or spark plugs or something else it would run fine at first, but then start acting up. If the carbs were gunked up wouldn't they run crappy consistently from start to finish?
I work as an Aircraft Mechanic and my experience is with Jet engines, not small carbs. Believe it or not I am a little intimidated by them. lol I just want to make sure before I dive into this project that I am actually looking at the right thing. Also, if I get the carbs rebuilt and everything synced up again, will running that last 1/4 of old gas negate all the work I did, or would it be safer to fill up the tank with fresh gas and mix it with the old? It costs so much to have the tanks dumped on these things I'm just trying to keep it cheap.
I have my carb parts kits on the way and hope to get started next weekend so let me know what you guys think. I tried to keep this short, but it's hard to describe exactly what the engine is doing without going into detail so I apologize for getting long winded.
At least I didn't just leave a message saying, "Engine inop" lol
Same ol story, Purchased the boat used and it is in pretty good shape. At time of purchase engine cranked up fine and idled on a hose no problem.
First couple times out in the boat everything was fine, but then started having issues getting the engine to turn over, maintain idle (cranks up but soon stalls out), and running out of sync or vibrating at max throttle as if one cylinder is not firing correctly. You can back the throttle down a little and engine smooths out, but doesn't produce enough pwer to get up on plane.
I've tried replacing all the fuel lines internally and externally, replaced entire fuel/water sep assembly with bigger 10 micron filter, have tried sea foam, new plugs, etc. After every replacement or fix I run it on hose and it runs perfect. Get it to the ramp and it runs ok at first, but then gradually starts having the same symptoms.
Boat was purchased with a full tank of fuel and owner says he always used stabil and proper oil mix. I pulled several fuel samples on the inlet side of filter and fuel has no sediment or water. It's also the correct tint showing proper fuel/oil mix.
I have managed to run the majority of the fuel out, but still have about 1/4 left. My gut tells me it's carb related and I need to rebuild them. My question to you guys is does this sound like a carb issue to you?
The thing that bugs me is the fact that after I replaced hoses or spark plugs or something else it would run fine at first, but then start acting up. If the carbs were gunked up wouldn't they run crappy consistently from start to finish?
I work as an Aircraft Mechanic and my experience is with Jet engines, not small carbs. Believe it or not I am a little intimidated by them. lol I just want to make sure before I dive into this project that I am actually looking at the right thing. Also, if I get the carbs rebuilt and everything synced up again, will running that last 1/4 of old gas negate all the work I did, or would it be safer to fill up the tank with fresh gas and mix it with the old? It costs so much to have the tanks dumped on these things I'm just trying to keep it cheap.
I have my carb parts kits on the way and hope to get started next weekend so let me know what you guys think. I tried to keep this short, but it's hard to describe exactly what the engine is doing without going into detail so I apologize for getting long winded.
At least I didn't just leave a message saying, "Engine inop" lol