Kola16
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Jun 23, 2019
- Messages
- 179
Hey all, just need some experience, thoughts, or opinions. You can skip all the intro if you want and scroll to the last two paragraphs, but here is the backstory. I just bought this used 1996 Yamaha 130TLRU 2 stroke for pretty cheap as a "mechanic special." I already deleted the oil injection and will just mix the oil and gas. I put it on a used 18' aluminum bass boat that I just got that had a smaller, older, falling apart 50 HP engine on it. So I replaced the older crappy engine with the Yamaha. I bought the Yamaha and knew the compression was low before I bought it so no surprise or grief there.
The compression numbers the marine mechanics had on it where the guy I bought it from took it to had it at:
110, 98, 90, and 115. (25 PSI or 24% difference between high and low)
I tried working some magic to hopefully see if I could raise the low cylinder by using Seafoam Deep Creep, then Marvel Mystery Oil in the cylinders, and Amsoil Power Tuner while it was running. After doing these three separate treatments I didn't get much. On my compression tester that reads higher than other compression testers, but consistent, I got:
117.5, 107.5, 105, and 125. (20 PSI or 17% difference between high and low)
So a little improvement, but still not quite what one would want.
The problem is that I do not have $1,500 to spend on a rebuild. I just do not. I just rebuilt everything on my offshore boat, and have spent a lot on fixing my truck and car.
MY MAIN QUESTION...
For $200 or so, could I potentially just buy new piston rings (and associated gaskets) to get my compression even again? I would be taking out all of the pistons, using one of those ball hones to deglaze the cylinders, then putting standard size new rings in it with the existing pistons. Would that help the engine last a season till I could afford a full rebuild? Or do you think that the cylinder walls are too worn away with my compression numbers to just be deglazed and have the same pistons and new rings go in them? Obviously, I need to measure the bore and current ring gaps for y'all to know more specifically, but the engine is fully assembled and running right now so I have not taken it apart.
I am not looking for a performance outboard, this will just be used for duck hunting 10 miles roundtrip on the weekends and fishing maybe once a month. It is plenty of HP as the old engine was only a 50 HP. Just want it reliable. Should I just wait the 8 months or so till I have the $1500 to do the full rebuild with the overbore? I will lose a lot of duck hunting time if I have to do that, and that would be tragic. Has anyone been successful just replacing the rings and deglazing?
I do not mind the extra work of honing and new rings and gaskets 1 year, then a full rebuild the next. It is spending that cheese that is just not doable right now. All opinions are welcome. Thanks!
The compression numbers the marine mechanics had on it where the guy I bought it from took it to had it at:
110, 98, 90, and 115. (25 PSI or 24% difference between high and low)
I tried working some magic to hopefully see if I could raise the low cylinder by using Seafoam Deep Creep, then Marvel Mystery Oil in the cylinders, and Amsoil Power Tuner while it was running. After doing these three separate treatments I didn't get much. On my compression tester that reads higher than other compression testers, but consistent, I got:
117.5, 107.5, 105, and 125. (20 PSI or 17% difference between high and low)
So a little improvement, but still not quite what one would want.
The problem is that I do not have $1,500 to spend on a rebuild. I just do not. I just rebuilt everything on my offshore boat, and have spent a lot on fixing my truck and car.
MY MAIN QUESTION...
For $200 or so, could I potentially just buy new piston rings (and associated gaskets) to get my compression even again? I would be taking out all of the pistons, using one of those ball hones to deglaze the cylinders, then putting standard size new rings in it with the existing pistons. Would that help the engine last a season till I could afford a full rebuild? Or do you think that the cylinder walls are too worn away with my compression numbers to just be deglazed and have the same pistons and new rings go in them? Obviously, I need to measure the bore and current ring gaps for y'all to know more specifically, but the engine is fully assembled and running right now so I have not taken it apart.
I am not looking for a performance outboard, this will just be used for duck hunting 10 miles roundtrip on the weekends and fishing maybe once a month. It is plenty of HP as the old engine was only a 50 HP. Just want it reliable. Should I just wait the 8 months or so till I have the $1500 to do the full rebuild with the overbore? I will lose a lot of duck hunting time if I have to do that, and that would be tragic. Has anyone been successful just replacing the rings and deglazing?
I do not mind the extra work of honing and new rings and gaskets 1 year, then a full rebuild the next. It is spending that cheese that is just not doable right now. All opinions are welcome. Thanks!
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