Engine Won't Run When Warm

twoelvis

Cadet
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
29
I am new to outboards. I have a lot of mechanical experience, just not with outboards. I just bought a pontoon boat with a 2005 90hp Johnson 2 stroke outboard. The engine runs great for the first 30-60 minutes of the day. After 30-60 minutes, it will either not idle, or barely idle. When it is barely idling, it stalls if I try to open the throttle in gear. If I open the throttle in neutral, there is a 50% chance it will stall, and a 50% chance it will rev up. If I keep it revved up, it runs just fine. But, then if I close the throttle to the idle position, it wants to stall again. It got me stuck on the river yesterday. So, I splashed some gas in to the intake and started it with the throttle in the idle position. It idled on the splashed gas for long enough that I could rev it up, and get back to the dock. Any help would be appreciated...
 

saltchuckmatt

Commander
Joined
Jul 19, 2019
Messages
2,640
Sounds like you sucked up some crap in the fuel system. Any fuel filters? How old was the fuel?
 

twoelvis

Cadet
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
29
The model is
It has 4 carburetors. Tank had next to nothing in it when I bought it (not enough that the ball became hard when I pumped it) I put 20 gallons in off the bat. Then took it on the water the day that I bought the boat. That was the first time that the problem occurred. I put a fuel/water separator in it the next day, and then took it out again. The same exact thing happened both times like clockwork. It ran perfect for the first 30-60 minutes, then would barely idle. The motor only has 180 hours on it. So, I dont think that it would be an internal engine issue. I have a stack of paperwork that came with the boat with meticulous service records. After it warmed up and quit running, I tried pumping the ball again, and the ball was not real hard. It took 1 or 2 pumps until the ball got hard again. But, pumping the ball also did not help the problem.

I am not sure if this is related. But, I believe the rectifier/regulator is bad. The tachometer works intermittently. I replaced the tachometer with a known good tachometer, and it does not work on this boat either.
 

saltchuckmatt

Commander
Joined
Jul 19, 2019
Messages
2,640
The model is
It has 4 carburetors. Tank had next to nothing in it when I bought it (not enough that the ball became hard when I pumped it) I put 20 gallons in off the bat. Then took it on the water the day that I bought the boat. That was the first time that the problem occurred. I put a fuel/water separator in it the next day, and then took it out again. The same exact thing happened both times like clockwork. It ran perfect for the first 30-60 minutes, then would barely idle. The motor only has 180 hours on it. So, I dont think that it would be an internal engine issue. I have a stack of paperwork that came with the boat with meticulous service records. After it warmed up and quit running, I tried pumping the ball again, and the ball was not real hard. It took 1 or 2 pumps until the ball got hard again. But, pumping the ball also did not help the problem.

I am not sure if this is related. But, I believe the rectifier/regulator is bad. The tachometer works intermittently. I replaced the tachometer with a known good tachometer, and it does not work on this boat either.
Your tach could be having issues because of the screwed up rectifier.....try some 50 to 1 fuel in a spray bottle and see if that keeps it going.

When you remove the plugs what story does the engine tell you?
 

twoelvis

Cadet
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
29
Your tach could be having issues because of the screwed up rectifier.....try some 50 to 1 fuel in a spray bottle and see if that keeps it going.

When you remove the plugs what story does the engine tell you?
I am pretty sure that the rectifier is what is causing the tach. issue. I plugged in a replacement rectifier momentarily to see if the tach worked, and it seemed to have solved the problem with the tach. I can not say for sure, because the tach. worked intermittently with the original rectifier. I do not have the gasket yet for the rectifier yet. So, I was not able to permanantly replace it. I wrongly assumed that the new rectifier would come with a gasket. On a side note, is it OK to use silicone sealant as a gasket for the rectifier, or should I wait for the OEM gasket to be delivered? Is there any chance that the potential rectifier problem would be causing the idling problem?
 

twoelvis

Cadet
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
29
I am pretty sure that the rectifier is what is causing the tach. issue. I plugged in a replacement rectifier momentarily to see if the tach worked, and it seemed to have solved the problem with the tach. I can not say for sure, because the tach. worked intermittently with the original rectifier. I do not have the gasket yet for the rectifier yet. So, I was not able to permanantly replace it. I wrongly assumed that the new rectifier would come with a gasket. On a side note, is it OK to use silicone sealant as a gasket for the rectifier, or should I wait for the OEM gasket to be delivered? Is there any chance that the potential rectifier problem would be causing the idling problem?

I am pretty sure that spraying gas/oil mix in the intake would keep it going. I am basing this on my experience just splashing gas in the intake to get it started.

I have to pull the plugs to see.
 

saltchuckmatt

Commander
Joined
Jul 19, 2019
Messages
2,640
Not aware of a rectifier gasket....if there is one it's there to keep it cooler I'm guessing. Use anything really.

Still sounds fuel related. Run motor...let it die and check the plugs.
 

Chris1956

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 25, 2004
Messages
27,840
My 1998 Johnny 150HPV6 (6 carbs) does that whenever you run it for a while and turn it off. It idles rough for a few minutes but will idle. I usually let it run for a few minutes at high idle and then she will clear out and run fine.

I think it is a slight overheat issue. You might check/change your thermostats and rebuild your waterpump, if it has not been done recently.
 

racerone

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Dec 28, 2013
Messages
37,818
The rectifier sits on top of the block.---It is water cooled.----Therefor it has a gasket.-----Are you pushing the key in and holding it in while cranking it over for cold starts??
 

saltchuckmatt

Commander
Joined
Jul 19, 2019
Messages
2,640
Didn't see any water nipples on the rectifier....maybe I'm wrong.
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20241030-142129.png
    Screenshot_20241030-142129.png
    514.4 KB · Views: 2

racerone

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Dec 28, 2013
Messages
37,818
You mis-understand how these motors are put together.----The rectifier mounts directly over the water jacket.----There for it uses a gasket , 0350357 is the part #.
 
Last edited:

saltchuckmatt

Commander
Joined
Jul 19, 2019
Messages
2,640
Or, since water doesn't go through it, the gasket insulates it from the hotter aluminum.

Two ways to look at it.
 
Top