Ahh that’s a great idea. ThanksA compression test on the cylinders when it's cold may give you an answer.
Yes I adjusted the valve lash when I replaced the heads a few years back. I have seen the technique you’re talking about and yes that does sound messy. But I may not have a choice. ThanksA compression test on the cylinders when it's cold may give you an answer.
Battery terminals are clean and tight. Also the battery is only a few years old and I always get the best one available. 14 volts when idling. Yes electrical bugs can be a buger. I’m an old EE with a lot of troubleshooting experience. I chased that about as far as it goes thinking it was an ignition thing initially. But Electrical bugs don’t typically go away after the engine gets hot. As soon as I get the opportunity I’ll do a cold compression test. At least I’ll know if the valves are holding tight. Then I’ll probably have to run it without the valve covers to see how they move.Collapsed lifter sounds plausible. How does the battery negative (black) cable look? If it gets corroded that can reduce voltage from the battery until the alternator can overcome the voltage drop. It can also stop the battery from getting fully charged, and reduce power to spark plug on start up. Those electrical gremlins can be hard to find.
have you checked the battery? It could have a dead cell. The battery runs the engine until the alternator spools up.
Quads are bad about leaking or dripping. Been there. I also had a plug leak one time and just pitched carb. But, that was back in days when they were a dime a dozen. If all else tests fails, boater may have to install an Elderbrock (sic).Most likely leaking Q-jet welsh plugs and misadjusted choke
Would explain the black soot
bad plug wires and condensation would account for misfire, however not the tach.Doesn't explain the tach though. I still think you're misfiring. Did you ever do a cylinder drop test? Also, I'd throw a timing light on each plug wire while it's misbehaving and make sure you're getting a consistent spark to each cylinder
RPM hunting rapidlyMotor going crazy?
Well, that's the tach acting as it should. And obvious. Doesn't sound like what's going on here.RPM hunting rapidly
Yes, but in that case the engine runs normally. Wonky running + wonky tach = missing spark until proven otherwise imoI experienced a crazy tach and a tip I picked up in a thread recommended I turn the selector switch to clean it up. So far so good.
Nick’s pronunciation lol!Quads are bad about leaking or dripping. Been there. I also had a plug leak one time and just pitched carb. But, that was back in days when they were a dime a dozen. If all else tests fails, boater may have to install an Elderbrock (sic).
Or a loose nut on coil or gauge... Been there too!bad plug wires and condensation would account for misfire, however not the tach.
only way tach can go crazy, is if the motor is going crazy or the signal from the coil is junk.
@tfret being a 1984, have you serviced the points?
Is it the old 2 wire sensor or the new 3 wire? (The old 2 wire have unsealed circuit board and the solder connections do get corroded, and could be getting resistive when cold, bit of heat and they conduct better. That would explain the tacho too..... I’ll change the sensor first and go from there.