Yes, thanks, I meant to bypass the carbs and allow direct fuel. And I'll replace the bulb.
But I'm still unclear on the primer valve solenoid. On the Youtube I watched, I note that the narrator says you can bypass the carbs by opening the red lever, then starting the engine, then turning the lever back down to normal running position. Is that the way it works? When I bought my boat ages ago the mechanic at the shop said to open the valve, squeeze the bulb twice, then return the valve to normal, then start the engine. Can you clarify?
Finally, if my solenoid is bad, how strongly do you feel about getting a new OEM valve for $230 compared to an aftermarket one for $60?
Thanks again for the help.
I'm wondering about my key switch, as well. Since I'm not in the water, I'm hoping I won't need to crank the engine to test the primer valve. Will the valve click when the key is pushed in without turning the key?Fortunately, I kept the old one (turn out being a bad key switch) . . .
No…..you have to turn the ignition on/run (self test sequence) before you can push the key in to activate the solenoid.Will the valve click when the key is pushed in without turning the key?
Okay. I've got lots of info to go on from here. I'll head back up to the lake and play a bit with the key and solenoid. But I think you're right about my solenoid not being the issue--because I manually bypassed the fuel manifold by using the red lever, and it still wouldn't start. I'm going to replace the plugs and the fuel squeeze bulb, and I'll try to be careful not to flood the carbs this time. I'm also going to drain the carbs more carefully, and tilt the engine when I do, to be sure I really did get all the old oil out of the system. As I mentioned before, only two of the six carb bowls (the two lowest) released any oil/fuel, so maybe there's something to that. Anyway, thanks for the info and guidance. I'll see where I can get on this.No…..you have to turn the ignition on/run (self test sequence) before you can push the key in to activate the solenoid.
If the motor will not start/stay running using the primer manually, a bad solenoid isn’t the problem.
The other thing to check is the filter screen inside to solenoid. Remove the 4 screws from the top of the primer valve to expose the screen below.
Careful removing the cap, if I remember correctly a little spring comes flying out
One thing I do is pull the plugs, run the starter and blow everything out (gas, oil, whatever), inspect the plugs and if they look ok I spray them out, run a stainless brush over them, re-gap them and burn them out slightly with a plumbers torch rolling them the hole time.Okay. I've got lots of info to go on from here. I'll head back up to the lake and play a bit with the key and solenoid. But I think you're right about my solenoid not being the issue--because I manually bypassed the fuel manifold by using the red lever, and it still wouldn't start. I'm going to replace the plugs and the fuel squeeze bulb, and I'll try to be careful not to flood the carbs this time. I'm also going to drain the carbs more carefully, and tilt the engine when I do, to be sure I really did get all the old oil out of the system. As I mentioned before, only two of the six carb bowls (the two lowest) released any oil/fuel, so maybe there's something to that. Anyway, thanks for the info and guidance. I'll see where I can get on this.
Only use QL77JC4 spark plugs.I'm going to replace the plugs and the fuel squeeze bulb, and I'll try to be careful not to flood the carbs this time.
Its a jetGuys, what is part Number #15 (see below)? High speed orifice? I need to replace a marred up screw plug (#6), but have no idea what that orifice thing is:
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