TravisPeters
Recruit
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2004
- Messages
- 3
Hello...first post here so I hope someone out there is more informative than the guys at the boat shop that have been working on this motor!<br /><br />My grandpa has a 1977 Mercury 115 h.p., inline 6 cylinder. Last year the motor would die after 5-10 minutes of running. When we would pull the plugs we found what we thought was carbon, but probably was aluminum all over the #2 cylinder. We would clean the plugs, the boat would run like a dream for 5-10 minutes and again the same thing would happen. Eventually it got to the point where it wouldn't run at top speed at all, but would only run at 25% power, even at full throttle. We took it to a shop and sure enough they said that the #2 cylinder had no compression... $1,300 later after a rebuild we finally get the boat back to the lake. They told us to double the oil for 10 hours, and "baby" it in that time...which we attempted to do. The engine would barely run from all the oil...it was a challenge to get the 10 hours on it, but after we did and went back to the 50:1 oil it ran better....however again, once we ran full speed for 5-10 minutes the engine would slowly slow down...to the point where it would barely run. We took it back to the mechanic...they claimed the plugs were fouled (yeah, but we replaced them at the lake and it still did it...) and they replaced the recitifier...claiming that the boat wasn't getting 12 volts, and that is what was causing the problems. <br /><br />I took it out AGAIN on Sunday and it took off from the dock like a champ...ran for about 7 minutes at full throttle and again...it powered down...eventually dying and wouldn't restart. We used the trolling motor to return to the dock.<br /><br />OK...HELP! Does anyone have any suggestions where to look? I am convinced it's electrical...it seems like as soon as the engine gets good and hot...the problem shows up. I pulled the plugs on Sunday and they looked great, no fouling or anything. The engine sounds wonderful while it runs wide open, and doesn't sound bad while it's running after loosing power...however it sounds like there could be a knock in it...but it's very faint. <br /><br />I know just enough about these motors to be dangerous, but not knowledgable to diagnose something like this. Does anyone have a clue? Could it be a fuel pump...which if it were not shooting fuel it could be the culprit from the original problem which lead to the #2 cylinder being burnt out? <br /><br />Please help me! I didn't want him to sink $1,300 into a motor that is almost 30 years old in the first place...but at 77 years old he couldn't justify $10,000 on a new outboard either. <br /><br />Thanks in advance!