and that is where you are wrong.
cold start - 1 to 2 full throttle motions. this sets the choke and primes the carb. only you will know if you need one or two full pumps of the throttle, as each motor is slightly different.. this doesnt mater if the drive is in gear or not..
then pull the handle out to throttle only, and move to 1/3 throttle. then turn key. when motor fires, back off RPM to 1500 RPM for about a minute (no cold idle cam on a boat carb). then you may pull away from the dock.
when its warm, just turn the key. if it sits for a while, you may need to advance throttle to prime.
quit thinking modern vehicle and think more like 1975 pickup truck with a carb. two pumps and turn the key
Exactly. It tells you right what to do under the sunvisor on my '74 GMC - one or two full throttle pumps and release when cold, depress and hold about halfway when warm.
My 2bbl carb boat fires right up after sitting for weeks with that method. Out on the lake warm, I have to crack the throttle open a bit just as prescribed above, or it doesn't want to start right away.
I asked to see the first start of the day when I went to look at it before purchase, and the PO obliged. He worked the throttle like a pump handle while cranking, and it took several seconds to fire up. I'm thinking your starter ain't gonna last as long as it should like that.
Having learned to drive on carbbed cars helps a lot. Although the correct method still escapes some who were alive back then, and ought to know...