Guys, help! My engine starts, runs about 4 seconds and quits. Yesterday at the lake I just had to give up and drive home. Because the boat had been sitting for months, I did use gas conditioner, and I also first drained the carbs through the drain plugs. Curiously, my fuel bulb from the tank to the motor was "mushy" and would never stiffen up until I held the bulb vertical, up and down.
Then, suddenly, I could hear gas making it to the carburetors, and the bulb got really tight and stiff. I'm told that is a known bulb defect of some sort. Well, at one point I got the engine to run a bit longer, maybe 12 seconds, and it shot huge clouds of gray smoke all around the dock. That has been typical of of this engine since new--but when it cut out, I simply could not restart it without the engine quitting again after just about 4 seconds.
I must admit, until I discovered the bulb issue, I used the red-lever to prime the carbs, and I possible flooded the carbs. But waiting 15 minutes made no difference.
I pulled my spark plugs and they were all very wet. I dried them off with a rag and re-installed them, but it made no difference at all. I'm wondering if the plugs were ruined or if my cleaning with a rag wasn't enough. But I'm also wondering if I just flooded the carbs so badly with the priming lever that I needed to wait more like an hour?
Yet another thought--should I have poked a small rod in the drain holes to be more certain the carbs weren't all "gunked" up inside? My fuel pump is VRO.
Is my fuel bulb somehow the problem since I had to aim it up vertically?
Any other ideas?
Thanks for any help, all. Marc
Then, suddenly, I could hear gas making it to the carburetors, and the bulb got really tight and stiff. I'm told that is a known bulb defect of some sort. Well, at one point I got the engine to run a bit longer, maybe 12 seconds, and it shot huge clouds of gray smoke all around the dock. That has been typical of of this engine since new--but when it cut out, I simply could not restart it without the engine quitting again after just about 4 seconds.
I must admit, until I discovered the bulb issue, I used the red-lever to prime the carbs, and I possible flooded the carbs. But waiting 15 minutes made no difference.
I pulled my spark plugs and they were all very wet. I dried them off with a rag and re-installed them, but it made no difference at all. I'm wondering if the plugs were ruined or if my cleaning with a rag wasn't enough. But I'm also wondering if I just flooded the carbs so badly with the priming lever that I needed to wait more like an hour?
Yet another thought--should I have poked a small rod in the drain holes to be more certain the carbs weren't all "gunked" up inside? My fuel pump is VRO.
Is my fuel bulb somehow the problem since I had to aim it up vertically?
Any other ideas?
Thanks for any help, all. Marc