I have a 2006 Monterey boat with a Mercruiser 4.3L TKS engine that after operating under a load for 35 to 40 minutes consistently experiences a gradual loss of power to the point where the engine appears to be starving for gasoline. When this happens, I back the throttle down to just in gear keeping the engine and propeller running. The engine never totally cuts off and appears to still be running smoothly. I am then limited to a 5mph crawl back to my dock. If I attempt to advance the throttle to give more gas, it will stall the engine. This has been occurring
I have had the boat into a couple of different marine repair shops over the last several years for this particular issue in which they have replaced multiple parts; anti-syphon valve, fuel tank hose, fuel pump, distributor, spark plugs, rotor, etc. and made several adjustments; throttle linkage, carb fuel mix, thinking they were solving the problem. But the problem keeps coming back.
I recently replaced the 2bbl carb with its same OEM remanufactured model, replaced the plugs, distributor and rotor. The engine, when cold, takes multiple full thrusts of the throttle before starting and then once warm purrs like a kitten and runs strong during sea trial up until the issue occurs. Then again, the issue starts with a gradual loss of engine power to the point of a noise from the engine that sounds like it's starving for fuel until I back off the throttle. The next day in the boat lift the engine cranks up OK and runs/accelerates smoothly.
After much research and reading many iBoats forum posts, I'm leaning towards a heat/extended usage related failing oil pressure switch since that controls voltage to the fuel pump. My question however is, can the oil pressure switch partially fail reducing the voltage to the fuel pump limiting the amount of fuel pumped to the carb or is it an all or nothing behavior if the oil pressure switch fails? Any differing ideas or advice would be greatly appreciated.
I have had the boat into a couple of different marine repair shops over the last several years for this particular issue in which they have replaced multiple parts; anti-syphon valve, fuel tank hose, fuel pump, distributor, spark plugs, rotor, etc. and made several adjustments; throttle linkage, carb fuel mix, thinking they were solving the problem. But the problem keeps coming back.
I recently replaced the 2bbl carb with its same OEM remanufactured model, replaced the plugs, distributor and rotor. The engine, when cold, takes multiple full thrusts of the throttle before starting and then once warm purrs like a kitten and runs strong during sea trial up until the issue occurs. Then again, the issue starts with a gradual loss of engine power to the point of a noise from the engine that sounds like it's starving for fuel until I back off the throttle. The next day in the boat lift the engine cranks up OK and runs/accelerates smoothly.
After much research and reading many iBoats forum posts, I'm leaning towards a heat/extended usage related failing oil pressure switch since that controls voltage to the fuel pump. My question however is, can the oil pressure switch partially fail reducing the voltage to the fuel pump limiting the amount of fuel pumped to the carb or is it an all or nothing behavior if the oil pressure switch fails? Any differing ideas or advice would be greatly appreciated.