Jamie Z
Cadet
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2009
- Messages
- 9
I was referred to this site by a member of ADVrider.com. I'm not new to water, but fairly new to powered boats.
Quick overview: My roommate has a 28-foot cabin cruiser. At the moment, I couldn't tell you the manufacturer. It's got a I/O drive, I think it's a Chevy 350 with a Volvo dual prop outdrive.
Anyway, he's had the boat for a few years, but for the past two or three seasons the boat has just sat in storage. I told him I'd pay half the slip if he'd put it in the water and let me use it. So a couple of weeks ago we put the boat in a marina. I'm very enthusiastic about using it, but we've had a couple of minor problems.
The first time we took it out, the boat ran perfectly for about an hour. Started right up, ran fine with no problems. Then fairly suddenly the engine sputtered and stalled. We were able to restart it, but then it would barely run above idle and we had to putt back to the marina.
We figured that the gas was old and that was the reason behind the poor running. The boat has a 106-gallon aluminum tank. The dash gauge showed about half full. The gas in the tank was about two years old. I don't know if any fuel stabilizer was used when the boat was put away.
I went back to the boat a week later. Again, the boat started and ran fine at first. I had it up at full speed for a bit, and then did a couple of small loops at half-throttle. No problems. Then it stalled and sputtered again.
I added 30-gallons of fuel at the marina. A guy at the marina suggested that I try a new fuel filter. I parked the boat, removed the fuel filter and bought a new one at a parts store up the road. It's a water-separating canister type filter.
I later disassembled the old filter, and to my eye it looked clean without any stains or rust.
With the new fuel filter installed, I ran the boat. Again, it would barely run above idle.
Today I went back and the first thing I did was take the cover off the fuel tank. I removed the sending unit on the tank and found this:
Though the tank is aluminum and appears to be in good shape, the sending unit is badly rusted with thick flakes of rust.
What I believe is happening is that the rust is clogging the screen on the fuel intake inside the tank. That's why it ran fine at first, but then sputtered. I also believe that the fuel in the tank is not bad or contaminated with water.
Is it possible to remove the rust from inside the tank? If it's just the sending unit which is rusting, then there isn't a lot of rust inside the tank, just enough to clog the fuel flow. I was thinking I could strain the fuel through a paint strainer and run the boat from an auxiliary tank temporarily until the main tank is empty, and then somehow clean out the rust from inside the tank.
Any suggestions where to go from here would be greatly appreciated. Go easy on me. I'm fairly mechanically inclined, but boats are a new thing to me (and my roommate).
Jamie
Quick overview: My roommate has a 28-foot cabin cruiser. At the moment, I couldn't tell you the manufacturer. It's got a I/O drive, I think it's a Chevy 350 with a Volvo dual prop outdrive.
Anyway, he's had the boat for a few years, but for the past two or three seasons the boat has just sat in storage. I told him I'd pay half the slip if he'd put it in the water and let me use it. So a couple of weeks ago we put the boat in a marina. I'm very enthusiastic about using it, but we've had a couple of minor problems.
The first time we took it out, the boat ran perfectly for about an hour. Started right up, ran fine with no problems. Then fairly suddenly the engine sputtered and stalled. We were able to restart it, but then it would barely run above idle and we had to putt back to the marina.
We figured that the gas was old and that was the reason behind the poor running. The boat has a 106-gallon aluminum tank. The dash gauge showed about half full. The gas in the tank was about two years old. I don't know if any fuel stabilizer was used when the boat was put away.
I went back to the boat a week later. Again, the boat started and ran fine at first. I had it up at full speed for a bit, and then did a couple of small loops at half-throttle. No problems. Then it stalled and sputtered again.
I added 30-gallons of fuel at the marina. A guy at the marina suggested that I try a new fuel filter. I parked the boat, removed the fuel filter and bought a new one at a parts store up the road. It's a water-separating canister type filter.
I later disassembled the old filter, and to my eye it looked clean without any stains or rust.
With the new fuel filter installed, I ran the boat. Again, it would barely run above idle.
Today I went back and the first thing I did was take the cover off the fuel tank. I removed the sending unit on the tank and found this:
Though the tank is aluminum and appears to be in good shape, the sending unit is badly rusted with thick flakes of rust.
What I believe is happening is that the rust is clogging the screen on the fuel intake inside the tank. That's why it ran fine at first, but then sputtered. I also believe that the fuel in the tank is not bad or contaminated with water.
Is it possible to remove the rust from inside the tank? If it's just the sending unit which is rusting, then there isn't a lot of rust inside the tank, just enough to clog the fuel flow. I was thinking I could strain the fuel through a paint strainer and run the boat from an auxiliary tank temporarily until the main tank is empty, and then somehow clean out the rust from inside the tank.
Any suggestions where to go from here would be greatly appreciated. Go easy on me. I'm fairly mechanically inclined, but boats are a new thing to me (and my roommate).
Jamie