I have observed the failing switch problem on a friends newer fuel injected version of my same basic motor. It failed closed so it beeped all the time. Unfortunately, the solution was replace the oil tank, $$. I will probably block off the pump. I've done all my own work on this motor for 20yrs now. My biggest worry is a bolt or nut falling off into nowhere land as I take things apart. I think I'll stuff a cloth under everything while doing this. Seems like my fingers fumble more than they used to.Either block it off or leave it alone. As stated this gear rarely fails on the I3/4 and 3L V6 motors unless severely overheated. The one most talked about and filters over to other engines is the 2.0/2.4/2.5L V-6. Yes they fail a lot. The biggest thing that fails most often on your engine is the oil warning module and the float in oil tank coming unglued from magnet.
Pennzoil super synthetic-blend TC-W3, available at wally world, is almost smokeless with 50:1 pre-mix. Only time you can detect smoke is going from idle to Firewall in the hole shot...and then it's only for the first second.....but it is 50:1, not 80:1 the ratio for those engines, per the Serv. Manual. BTDTThe good thing to count with an auto oiler is that when at idle that motor will be running say at 100:1, at open throttle at 50:1. If the oiling system is cancelled or removed the motor will rev at 50:1 ratio through the entire rpm range. Will foul plugs faster when idling, trolling....
Happy Boating
Lubricants of today are not as they were back in the '50s and earlier, when it was the quart of 4 cycle engine oil for 24:1 vs todays 50:1. Materials are better understood for particular applications and with CDC milling machines of today, tolerances are changing from 0.001" to 0.0001" which require a smaller oil molecule for proper lubrication.You have to wonder what scientific work determined that one year mix was 24:1 and the following year it is 50:1.----Same parts and pieces in the 2 models.-----
I agree on what you are saying here. My current Merc 115 2 stroker is a 2+2 meaning at speeds below about 2000-2500 RPMs it only runs on 2 cylinders as there isn't enough fuel to the other two to ignite into combustion necessary to consider the cylinder providing power. Once up above the kick in point, it does take a short period of time for the wet plugs to clean up with the combustion heat and come online at 100%. Through trial and error, I found that tilting the rear of the engine up 10* or so and running NGK Iridium plugs solves that problem and when I hammer down on it now , she's ready to go and when idling in F gear, the engine doesn't vibrate...indicating misfiring of some sort.That motor must be one of a kind. To get the idea, when plug fouls excessively there will be some motor hesitation when the throttle is opened up that will cure itself once the motor starts heating up towards a mucher higher workint temp.. It's not that you have to remove the plugs and cleam them out at your fishing spot. Plug fouling it's very notorious on 2-3 cylinder motors running premix 50:1 ratios at constant slow rpm for extended time periods....
Happy Boating
What did you end up doing? I have 2001 elpto 90 that I would like to delete the oil injection. I saw someone sent a link for the block off plate but it does not say it is for that motor. I was hoping that it worked for youI've got a 90hp 2000 elpto s/n OT087666 with about 500 hrs on it.
I'm concerned that the auto oiling thing is gonna fail, if not the pump then a hose somewhere, clamp etc.. I've been told disabling is not that simple because the pump is driven off the crank so it requires a teardown to remove the pump and the pump needs the oil flow to keep from failing/seizing itself. So I am thinking a solution to the problem would be to disconnect the oil output going to the carbs and simply have those hoses dump their oil back into the oil tank. So it would just be a big oil loop.
Any problems with that shade tree mod?