havoc_squad
Senior Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2011
- Messages
- 739
I have a 1993 Mercruiser 3.0L with EST ignition and I either cannot seem to get it to enter base time mode, or I can't get it out of base time mode.
I did an initial lake test run yesterday and noticed after it warmed up, it was acting rough at idle.
I ruled out fuel initially since it was stabilized fully on winterization and no issues in performance other than idle. Carb is 2 years or less old.
To add to my suspicions that it was timing, I had my distributor jump time on my last year and a reputable mercruiser service center spotted the issue and fixed it.
To confirm this, I did a slight lean adjustment on the carb (1/4 turn) to smooth up the idle, and when under load I turned my drive hard which the power steering puts a load on the engine, I started hearing knocking sounds while the pump was working hard. When I did this in neutral, the no engine knocking occur. Also, the leaner you go, the louder the knocking gets.
So, I went home and researched the service manual, bought a timing gun with RPM gauge on it, and made me a base time mode jumper.
So I get the boat warmed up at home on the muffs, disconnect the shift interrupt jumper wire, then apply the base time mode jumpers to the ports for the distributor.
The current timing shown was I believe -20's BTDC while the jumpers were on. I adjusted it to -1 to -2 ish BTDC, then locked down the distributor, verified that it held, then pulled the base time jumpers out of the ports and re-connected the shift interrupt wire.
The problem is the boat engine's ignition is still stuck at -1 to -2 ish BTDC after setting base time which is causing the engine to run rough at idle, and does not revert to the Mercruiser service manual specified -12 (+/-2 degrees) BTDC at idle.
Is there any way to troubleshoot whether the distributor is going into base time mode and when it exits? If not, is there any way to test components to see if the EST module is defective?
I did an initial lake test run yesterday and noticed after it warmed up, it was acting rough at idle.
I ruled out fuel initially since it was stabilized fully on winterization and no issues in performance other than idle. Carb is 2 years or less old.
To add to my suspicions that it was timing, I had my distributor jump time on my last year and a reputable mercruiser service center spotted the issue and fixed it.
To confirm this, I did a slight lean adjustment on the carb (1/4 turn) to smooth up the idle, and when under load I turned my drive hard which the power steering puts a load on the engine, I started hearing knocking sounds while the pump was working hard. When I did this in neutral, the no engine knocking occur. Also, the leaner you go, the louder the knocking gets.
So, I went home and researched the service manual, bought a timing gun with RPM gauge on it, and made me a base time mode jumper.
So I get the boat warmed up at home on the muffs, disconnect the shift interrupt jumper wire, then apply the base time mode jumpers to the ports for the distributor.
The current timing shown was I believe -20's BTDC while the jumpers were on. I adjusted it to -1 to -2 ish BTDC, then locked down the distributor, verified that it held, then pulled the base time jumpers out of the ports and re-connected the shift interrupt wire.
The problem is the boat engine's ignition is still stuck at -1 to -2 ish BTDC after setting base time which is causing the engine to run rough at idle, and does not revert to the Mercruiser service manual specified -12 (+/-2 degrees) BTDC at idle.
Is there any way to troubleshoot whether the distributor is going into base time mode and when it exits? If not, is there any way to test components to see if the EST module is defective?
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