Jungleboat
Petty Officer 3rd Class
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2010
- Messages
- 78
Hi, just wondering if anyone has a solid clue or two...
Background - Engine usually runs fine, though a few times has lost a pot due to loose connections between pack and cylinder coil (it has a coil per pot). Replaced all 4 of those wires with new.
Lately power has reduced again, same low power but I don't notice the vibration that occured when she lost one pot before. With engine cover off, all 4 seemed to be sparking OK, and all (now) have the correct Champion plug and correct gap.
It's a 21ft deep V cabin boat, usually does 32mph WOT, has dropped to 21mph (GPS). Beyond a certain point, more throttle just makes a deeper engine note, presumably air intake, but no extra oomph.
It's not loss of compression, because every now and then she'll surge forward, before settling back down into a miserable drone. Does that for approximately 3 seconds, and extremely intermittent. Might happen, might not.
So fuel starvation, right?
Then the starter relay went. While the local mechanic was fixing that asked if he could service the carbs, which he did. Next day tested it, ran fine, full power.
Today we went to move the boat ready for the tide tomorrow morning, first trip since the test drive - low power again!
I can't believe the carbs have clogged again already, without being used.
So I'm presuming this is electrical?
I should add that I'm on Borneo, ohm meters, compression gauges and such are not available, just a local guy with a box of spanners and a local new boat dealer who can get Johnson parts (eventually).
It's not the fuel breather vent, because 1. it was open and 2. I forgot once and noticed because it had sucked the plastic tank concave...
Talking of fuel, it was the same fuel when slow, when fast and when slow again, so not stale fuel.
At this stage I'm guessing the power pack (what exactly does the power pack do, anyway? Some little black box thing?) or corroded wiring somewhere?
Or could it be fuel again?
What happens if you get water in the carbs? Would that block it somehow - or just throw non-igniting water through the engine? I ask because the tank and its breather vent are exposed to the rain. It's quite possible a few drops have worked their way in there, if the vent were left open.
(Yes, I know I should get a water separator, it doesn't seem to have one, just some sight-glass thing and a squeezy pump)
Any ideas?
A couple of points which I presume are irrelevent but I'll mention them anyway -
I usually leave the positive battery terminal disconnected, to prevent any chance of fire when the boat is unattended. When setting off it's just twisted back on by hand. This has never been a problem but today the starter motor was totally dead until the battery was twisted and fiddled with a lot - including pulling it out of its mounting to check the other connection. There's a whole bunch of wires under there that got pulled and moved around.
It was deffo making contact, no corrosion on the terminal or anything, but after some twisting around it suddenly came to life and turned the engine over. I find it unlikely there was a bad connection on that battery, so just wondering if I nudged some other wire somewhere?
Would, or could such a wire, away from the engine, cause such low power?
The other thing is the first new relay (solenoid) the guy fitted didn't work, he had to go get another one. Again, could it be it did work but had a bad battery connection or some other wire? Then it was clicking but not turning the motor, the replacement worked OK, though today it wasn't even clicking, until I just kept on twisting the terminal connector.
I'm presuming the battery connection and starter relay are nothing to do with the low power, but thought I'd mention them anyway :redface:
JB
Background - Engine usually runs fine, though a few times has lost a pot due to loose connections between pack and cylinder coil (it has a coil per pot). Replaced all 4 of those wires with new.
Lately power has reduced again, same low power but I don't notice the vibration that occured when she lost one pot before. With engine cover off, all 4 seemed to be sparking OK, and all (now) have the correct Champion plug and correct gap.
It's a 21ft deep V cabin boat, usually does 32mph WOT, has dropped to 21mph (GPS). Beyond a certain point, more throttle just makes a deeper engine note, presumably air intake, but no extra oomph.
It's not loss of compression, because every now and then she'll surge forward, before settling back down into a miserable drone. Does that for approximately 3 seconds, and extremely intermittent. Might happen, might not.
So fuel starvation, right?
Then the starter relay went. While the local mechanic was fixing that asked if he could service the carbs, which he did. Next day tested it, ran fine, full power.
Today we went to move the boat ready for the tide tomorrow morning, first trip since the test drive - low power again!
I can't believe the carbs have clogged again already, without being used.
So I'm presuming this is electrical?
I should add that I'm on Borneo, ohm meters, compression gauges and such are not available, just a local guy with a box of spanners and a local new boat dealer who can get Johnson parts (eventually).
It's not the fuel breather vent, because 1. it was open and 2. I forgot once and noticed because it had sucked the plastic tank concave...
Talking of fuel, it was the same fuel when slow, when fast and when slow again, so not stale fuel.
At this stage I'm guessing the power pack (what exactly does the power pack do, anyway? Some little black box thing?) or corroded wiring somewhere?
Or could it be fuel again?
What happens if you get water in the carbs? Would that block it somehow - or just throw non-igniting water through the engine? I ask because the tank and its breather vent are exposed to the rain. It's quite possible a few drops have worked their way in there, if the vent were left open.
(Yes, I know I should get a water separator, it doesn't seem to have one, just some sight-glass thing and a squeezy pump)
Any ideas?
A couple of points which I presume are irrelevent but I'll mention them anyway -
I usually leave the positive battery terminal disconnected, to prevent any chance of fire when the boat is unattended. When setting off it's just twisted back on by hand. This has never been a problem but today the starter motor was totally dead until the battery was twisted and fiddled with a lot - including pulling it out of its mounting to check the other connection. There's a whole bunch of wires under there that got pulled and moved around.
It was deffo making contact, no corrosion on the terminal or anything, but after some twisting around it suddenly came to life and turned the engine over. I find it unlikely there was a bad connection on that battery, so just wondering if I nudged some other wire somewhere?
Would, or could such a wire, away from the engine, cause such low power?
The other thing is the first new relay (solenoid) the guy fitted didn't work, he had to go get another one. Again, could it be it did work but had a bad battery connection or some other wire? Then it was clicking but not turning the motor, the replacement worked OK, though today it wasn't even clicking, until I just kept on twisting the terminal connector.
I'm presuming the battery connection and starter relay are nothing to do with the low power, but thought I'd mention them anyway :redface:
JB