OK Force gurus, I need some verification on my troubleshooting before I buy parts.
History;
I got the boat from my neighbor last year. The 1989 Force 150 (1508E9A) had a couple of issues that I corrected. One of them was a bad CD unit. There was no spark on 1 cyl. and of the units I had, the spare side on the unit controlling the #3 cyl, was also bad. I bought a good used unit off an auction site and installed it. Engine ran fine. I ran out of boating season last year before I could dial in the timing, so I winterized it. I disconnected the fuel line and let the engine run on muffs until all fuel was out of the lines. Drained the LU of water, removed the batteries, covered the boat and parked it on the side of my house.
Note the Engine ran fine.
Now I am getting it ready for the lake thinking all I have to do is start on the timing, dial it in and I am floating.
Well I could not get the engine to start, or even to catch. So I checked my spark, and I do not have spark on #3 and #4 cyl. I checked my connections and found 1 that was questionable (even it was the trigger to the CD unit for the #5 cyl) I repaired it re-tested to no change. Thinking I have a bad CD unit I started to test them by moving the known good unit (#1 and #2 cyl.) to the other locations. Still no spark on the #3 cyl, but got spark on the #4 cyl. At that point I switched the #3 cyl ignition coil with the #2cyl one, and got spark on #3, but not #2.
This tells me that my stator and trigger are good (correct me if I am wrong), and I have 1 bad ignition coil, and a bad CD unit.
What raises red flags for me is I am questioning how 2 good electronic units can work until I let them sit with no voltage and they go bad. So I am wondering if there is another part (ie. breaker, relay, resistor, regulator) to the ignition/electrical system that could go bad and cause these units to crap out. I don't want to buy a good unit and put into a system that will break them.
Am I over thinking it? or is there something I am missing?
History;
I got the boat from my neighbor last year. The 1989 Force 150 (1508E9A) had a couple of issues that I corrected. One of them was a bad CD unit. There was no spark on 1 cyl. and of the units I had, the spare side on the unit controlling the #3 cyl, was also bad. I bought a good used unit off an auction site and installed it. Engine ran fine. I ran out of boating season last year before I could dial in the timing, so I winterized it. I disconnected the fuel line and let the engine run on muffs until all fuel was out of the lines. Drained the LU of water, removed the batteries, covered the boat and parked it on the side of my house.
Note the Engine ran fine.
Now I am getting it ready for the lake thinking all I have to do is start on the timing, dial it in and I am floating.
Well I could not get the engine to start, or even to catch. So I checked my spark, and I do not have spark on #3 and #4 cyl. I checked my connections and found 1 that was questionable (even it was the trigger to the CD unit for the #5 cyl) I repaired it re-tested to no change. Thinking I have a bad CD unit I started to test them by moving the known good unit (#1 and #2 cyl.) to the other locations. Still no spark on the #3 cyl, but got spark on the #4 cyl. At that point I switched the #3 cyl ignition coil with the #2cyl one, and got spark on #3, but not #2.
This tells me that my stator and trigger are good (correct me if I am wrong), and I have 1 bad ignition coil, and a bad CD unit.
What raises red flags for me is I am questioning how 2 good electronic units can work until I let them sit with no voltage and they go bad. So I am wondering if there is another part (ie. breaker, relay, resistor, regulator) to the ignition/electrical system that could go bad and cause these units to crap out. I don't want to buy a good unit and put into a system that will break them.
Am I over thinking it? or is there something I am missing?