I bought boat/motor two years ago. It had NOT been used for about 8-10 years. That said, I thought I was prepared for some work. Little did I know.
Before attempting to start, I fogged the motor and made certain the crankshaft freely rotated. After a few basic tests, I found the motor had no spark and several of the (6) carbs were leaking. Compression is 95 - 100 psi across all cylinders. I replaced almost all of the ignition system, including optics sensor, power pack, coils, wiring, plugs....and rebuilt all 6 carbs, including cleaning and installing a new throttle body to manifold gasket. Although I did not remove the intake manifold, I visually inspected the reed valves and they appeared to be almost new. I set the idle/air fuel mixture screws to 5-1/2 turns, only slightly richer than specified (5 turns) in the manual. Also per recommended manual procedure, I synched the carbs and linkages; set the timing pointer and set timing with OMC analyzer.
In addition, the following components have been replaced: fuel pump bulb, fuel filters, VRO2 pump diaphragm, choke switch, vacuum switch, thermostats, ignition switch, water pump, etc. I have tested the stator, timer base, and it's getting spark on all cylinders, etc.....all good. I have also tested the stop switch circuit.
The motor starts and runs roughly (1200 RPM), but quits after the "cold start" cycle completed....UNLESS I mechanically advance the timing (slightly) and the carb throttle linkage. Even with that, it still runs rough. I have tried manually actuating the choke while running, but it seems to make little difference. About the only difference noted is it runs longer after warm-ups, but NEVER well. If it idles down to 800 RPM or so, it stalls.
I should note, the boat is still on the trailer, so all testing and work has been performed with the muffs for water circulation.
I am convinced the problem is lean fuel delivery, possibly in conjunction with timing. I have tried propane around the carbs/manifold to see if it affects the motor (indicating an air/vacuum leak), but noted no difference in RPM.
I think it MUST be lean fuel delivery. Although the idle air/fuel mixture screws were adjusted to 5-1/2 turns after carbs rebuild (slightly richer than factory recommended settings), I intend to incrementally enrich the air/fuel mixtures to see if I can get some improvement. That said, it's hard to believe that a lean condition could make such a radical difference....but then, I'm not familiar with 2-cyle motors.
Any professional guidance would be appreciated. Thank you.
Before attempting to start, I fogged the motor and made certain the crankshaft freely rotated. After a few basic tests, I found the motor had no spark and several of the (6) carbs were leaking. Compression is 95 - 100 psi across all cylinders. I replaced almost all of the ignition system, including optics sensor, power pack, coils, wiring, plugs....and rebuilt all 6 carbs, including cleaning and installing a new throttle body to manifold gasket. Although I did not remove the intake manifold, I visually inspected the reed valves and they appeared to be almost new. I set the idle/air fuel mixture screws to 5-1/2 turns, only slightly richer than specified (5 turns) in the manual. Also per recommended manual procedure, I synched the carbs and linkages; set the timing pointer and set timing with OMC analyzer.
In addition, the following components have been replaced: fuel pump bulb, fuel filters, VRO2 pump diaphragm, choke switch, vacuum switch, thermostats, ignition switch, water pump, etc. I have tested the stator, timer base, and it's getting spark on all cylinders, etc.....all good. I have also tested the stop switch circuit.
The motor starts and runs roughly (1200 RPM), but quits after the "cold start" cycle completed....UNLESS I mechanically advance the timing (slightly) and the carb throttle linkage. Even with that, it still runs rough. I have tried manually actuating the choke while running, but it seems to make little difference. About the only difference noted is it runs longer after warm-ups, but NEVER well. If it idles down to 800 RPM or so, it stalls.
I should note, the boat is still on the trailer, so all testing and work has been performed with the muffs for water circulation.
I am convinced the problem is lean fuel delivery, possibly in conjunction with timing. I have tried propane around the carbs/manifold to see if it affects the motor (indicating an air/vacuum leak), but noted no difference in RPM.
I think it MUST be lean fuel delivery. Although the idle air/fuel mixture screws were adjusted to 5-1/2 turns after carbs rebuild (slightly richer than factory recommended settings), I intend to incrementally enrich the air/fuel mixtures to see if I can get some improvement. That said, it's hard to believe that a lean condition could make such a radical difference....but then, I'm not familiar with 2-cyle motors.
Any professional guidance would be appreciated. Thank you.