remove the starter .. the motor armature shaft bushing is worn . also inspect the brushes and commutator ..Got ya.
Well I got it all wired up and then the starter started making a terrible noise and the key stopped cranking so I threw in the towel for the day.
Thanks again. I'll report how it runs when I get it back in the water.
You have match the curve, 12 initial and 24 electronic advance.I think I have found your problem. Your engine is specéd for a total advance of 36 degrees, not 23, that is for the later 140s...
You've removed 13 degrees of advance out of the engine, little wonder it's only making 3600rpm.
View attachment 358365
The 3.0 is limited on how far you can advance the ignition. Exceed the limit and the motor eats itselfYep, it's on the list to dig into. Gonna have to figure out a method to have a broader timing curve.
From Post #10The motor has the same architecture. The same bad head design. The same bad combustion chamber. Your old points dizzy was set to 4 degrees of base timing with a maximum advance of 24 degrees for a total timing of 28.
The est dizzy will adjust up to 28 degrees.
I would check the plugs to see if you are lean as well.From Post #10
View attachment 362134Mercruiser 140 Points to Delco EST results in low RPM at WOT
I've been banging my head on the wall trying to figure out how to solve my low RPM at WOT issue that happened after I replaced the points with a Delco Est ignition. I've got a 84 crestliner with a merc 140, serial A330922, the boat got a replacement 140 to replace the blown up older 370 that...forums.iboats.com
Is the above not correct for my serial number engine?
I am not arguing about the marble sound and it being bad, just trying to sort out conflicting information for what the points system had for total advance on my motor. Tonight I am going to verify base timing then back it down to 6-8* and retry and see if marbles are gone and what rpm it pulls to.