Little Terry
Recruit
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2009
- Messages
- 2
Hello everyone.
My first post here, so apologies if i come accross as being a bit clueless - that will be because I am!
My mate and I have just aquired a small shakespeare boat that has a Mercury 90 outboard on it. We are trying to re-commission the outfit to use for a few fishing trips. However, we have not owned a boat before and our experience is limited to a few charter trips for wreck fishing etc on someone elses, rather larger than ours, boat!
The engine is a 6 cylinder inline 2-stroke motor as far as we can see. There does not seem to be any form of ID plate on it (unless we are looking in the wrong places). The casing suggests that it is a Mercury 90 'power trim'.
There are some casting numbers on the cylinder head.......1023 5068
There are some casting numbers on the intake side of the block, between the carbs..........971-7328
That seems to be all!
It has three 1bbl side draft carbs.
We have had the motor turning over by shorting out the starter solenoid and it spins freely. There is a good spark and plenty of fuel getting to the carbs (it runs out of the air intake on each carb) but the fuel doesn't seem to be getting into the bores. We got it to fire last night by removing the plugs and squirting a little gas in manually. It ran well on that for a second or two then stopped again.
Is there some sort of safety device that would shut off the fuel from the bore? Or is it just sticking floats in the carbs? The dash is very basic and just has an ignition toggle switch and two buttons - one is an electric choke device and the other presumably is for the starter, but that doesn't seem to work. There is also a switch that has a thick black, two-core cable running to it - the seller told us to pull that out and put a clamp behind it to stop it going back in (I presume that its some sort of 'dead-man' switch that should be connected to the drivers wrist).
The guy we bought it from seemed very surprised that it wouldn't run (and we know him well, and is unlikely to be lying). He used it on a local boating lake last summer and it has been sitting still since.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I am reasonably experienced with car engines, but know nothing about boats (so far)!
Thanks in advance,
Mark.
I will try to post a pic of the motor later.
My first post here, so apologies if i come accross as being a bit clueless - that will be because I am!
My mate and I have just aquired a small shakespeare boat that has a Mercury 90 outboard on it. We are trying to re-commission the outfit to use for a few fishing trips. However, we have not owned a boat before and our experience is limited to a few charter trips for wreck fishing etc on someone elses, rather larger than ours, boat!
The engine is a 6 cylinder inline 2-stroke motor as far as we can see. There does not seem to be any form of ID plate on it (unless we are looking in the wrong places). The casing suggests that it is a Mercury 90 'power trim'.
There are some casting numbers on the cylinder head.......1023 5068
There are some casting numbers on the intake side of the block, between the carbs..........971-7328
That seems to be all!
It has three 1bbl side draft carbs.
We have had the motor turning over by shorting out the starter solenoid and it spins freely. There is a good spark and plenty of fuel getting to the carbs (it runs out of the air intake on each carb) but the fuel doesn't seem to be getting into the bores. We got it to fire last night by removing the plugs and squirting a little gas in manually. It ran well on that for a second or two then stopped again.
Is there some sort of safety device that would shut off the fuel from the bore? Or is it just sticking floats in the carbs? The dash is very basic and just has an ignition toggle switch and two buttons - one is an electric choke device and the other presumably is for the starter, but that doesn't seem to work. There is also a switch that has a thick black, two-core cable running to it - the seller told us to pull that out and put a clamp behind it to stop it going back in (I presume that its some sort of 'dead-man' switch that should be connected to the drivers wrist).
The guy we bought it from seemed very surprised that it wouldn't run (and we know him well, and is unlikely to be lying). He used it on a local boating lake last summer and it has been sitting still since.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I am reasonably experienced with car engines, but know nothing about boats (so far)!
Thanks in advance,
Mark.
I will try to post a pic of the motor later.