MichaelBC
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2020
- Messages
- 110
You're not going to like what I say, but it needs to be said...
I always like good advice and if someone helps me to understand things.
Incorrect. It's not heat that is causing the problem. I suspected the same thing, it was a nice day around 24 degrees, so I pulled the carb and set it up on a bench. I blew compressed air down one venturi and fuel was drawn through. I then stopped the air and refilled the float chamber (as a running fuel pump would have done). Fuel continued dripping from the venturi until the float chamber was empty. This issue has nothing to do with heat.
This was just an assumption. But what I can say is that my carb is is empty after a day or two. I have a transparent little fuel filter in line to protect the sender of the flow meter. So I can see that there is a good amount of fuel pumped in the carb when I turn on ignition and it stops when the carb valves get closed by the floats. So the carb bowls must be empty and as I do not think that the fuel is slowly dripping into the engine it must evaporate.
The reason is so that the fuel pump CAN NOT run unless the engine is turning. And should the engine stall, the pump stops running
What you have done, despite your rationalisation, is very dangerous. You have a boat just itching to go up in flames...
OK, now it is getting interesting. I talked to quite few people here and half of them told me about the same as you do and the other half did already the same modification that I did for years.
I do understand that it is nice when the fuel pump only runs when the engine is turning. But if the carb bowls are full the pump works against the closed carb valves. As the pump can bring much more fuel as the engine takes, the pump also does this when the engine is running.
So can you give me one example what could happen that causes my boat to go up in flames ?
In the 80s, when cars had carbs, all european cars started the elctric fuel pump when you turned on the ignition. I remember that I could always hear it when turning the key before the radio came up.
So why is it so harmful on a boat when it worked for millions of cars in the past and very few of them did go up in flames ?
The pump original wiring was as it was for a reason.
This is exactly what I would like to understand. What is this reason ?
If this reason makes sense to me I will change the wiring back today. Seriuosly, I would like to understand why this setup is like it is and what I do not see so far.
And in doing that you have violated coast guard regulations. If ANYTHING happens on that boat, regardless of whether it has anything to do with the fuel pump wiring, your insurance company is going to wipe their hands of you, and any injured 3rd party will sue you out of existence...
This was my bad, I didn't think about coast guard regulations as my boat runs in Europe. Should have thought about it as this is a US forum.
Here we do not have any regulations on boats, which is funny as we have much more regulations on cars than you have. Also the insurance company could only leave me alone if they prove to me that an illegal modification was the root cause of an accident. As there are no regulations this would be very hard.
Regards
Michael