I've searched this forum and read a few threads. There is a lot of general advice on tracing voltage drops! So that's not what I'm here for. I'm here in case, after I describe what's happening, someone knows and can tell me, "Oh yeah...that's really common on that boat/motor, here's what you do..."
I have a 1990 Four Winns 190 Freedom with a 4.3L V6 OMC I/O. It's been a great boat. This year I've had trouble starting it. The starter just seems..."weak" and it's honestly a gamble as to whether it will start at all. I started by assuming the battery needed to be topped up, so I put it on a charger. That worked once. I took the battery to my local auto parts store and they put it on a gizmo that charges it and then puts it under load. It would fully charge, but as soon as you took it off the charger you could watch the voltage drop FAST. It was new in 2017, so I figured I'd gotten my money's worth and bought a new one.
But that did not fix the problem. Brand new battery, fully charged and it was still like there was molasses in the system somewhere. I should say at this point that when I DO manage to get the boat started, it runs just fine. I next turned my sights to the alternator. I removed that and took that to be tested. I was told it was failing (though I am now skeptical of that) and replaced it too.
But THAT did not fix the problem. So I removed the starter (not fun!). I did not have a way to test it under load, but with 12v applied it takes right off like a starter should. There does not seem to be any issue with the solenoid either. I put it back. The problem persisted.
I managed to get it started one more time and was going to take it to the boat launch to trailer it (we are on a lake and the boat lives on a lift). Before doing that I took a friend for a ride. 3 minutes out from shore I glanced down at the dash and noticed that the NAV LTS toggle switch was on! I thought I had found the problem. That switch had been on for WEEKS and while tiny, that little incandescent bulb could explain the voltage issue! (Yeah yeah...I will replace it with an LED this Fall.)
But no. Same problem. 12+ volts at the battery. 13+ on the dash voltage gauge if I manage to get the motor started. But with the key on and the motor off, the gauge reads 10v if I'm lucky.
Help? Is this a "known thing"? I've taken the boat to my Boat Guy because I gave up. I suppose I could whip out my meter and start tracing things. But maybe someone will see this and tell me all I need to do is "change the spider gear in the muffler" or something and everything will be fine.
If you read all the way to the end, thank you!
I have a 1990 Four Winns 190 Freedom with a 4.3L V6 OMC I/O. It's been a great boat. This year I've had trouble starting it. The starter just seems..."weak" and it's honestly a gamble as to whether it will start at all. I started by assuming the battery needed to be topped up, so I put it on a charger. That worked once. I took the battery to my local auto parts store and they put it on a gizmo that charges it and then puts it under load. It would fully charge, but as soon as you took it off the charger you could watch the voltage drop FAST. It was new in 2017, so I figured I'd gotten my money's worth and bought a new one.
But that did not fix the problem. Brand new battery, fully charged and it was still like there was molasses in the system somewhere. I should say at this point that when I DO manage to get the boat started, it runs just fine. I next turned my sights to the alternator. I removed that and took that to be tested. I was told it was failing (though I am now skeptical of that) and replaced it too.
But THAT did not fix the problem. So I removed the starter (not fun!). I did not have a way to test it under load, but with 12v applied it takes right off like a starter should. There does not seem to be any issue with the solenoid either. I put it back. The problem persisted.
I managed to get it started one more time and was going to take it to the boat launch to trailer it (we are on a lake and the boat lives on a lift). Before doing that I took a friend for a ride. 3 minutes out from shore I glanced down at the dash and noticed that the NAV LTS toggle switch was on! I thought I had found the problem. That switch had been on for WEEKS and while tiny, that little incandescent bulb could explain the voltage issue! (Yeah yeah...I will replace it with an LED this Fall.)
But no. Same problem. 12+ volts at the battery. 13+ on the dash voltage gauge if I manage to get the motor started. But with the key on and the motor off, the gauge reads 10v if I'm lucky.
Help? Is this a "known thing"? I've taken the boat to my Boat Guy because I gave up. I suppose I could whip out my meter and start tracing things. But maybe someone will see this and tell me all I need to do is "change the spider gear in the muffler" or something and everything will be fine.
If you read all the way to the end, thank you!