Mercury's shop manual for my 1994 225-HP carb two-stroke talks about checking the engine's idle speed when the outboard is "idling in gear."
This seems like an oxymoron to me. I always thought the whole idea of an engine "idling" was that it was disconnected from its drive train (propeller in the case of an outboard).
So would "idling in gear" mean to nudge the throttle forward until it goes into gear, but not give it any more throttle than that? My boat generally moves at about 3.5 mph when set to this position.
This seems like an oxymoron to me. I always thought the whole idea of an engine "idling" was that it was disconnected from its drive train (propeller in the case of an outboard).
So would "idling in gear" mean to nudge the throttle forward until it goes into gear, but not give it any more throttle than that? My boat generally moves at about 3.5 mph when set to this position.