Eric 3.7LX Alpha 1
Captain
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2010
- Messages
- 3,008
Awesome! Glad you got it figured out.
Usually if you were activating the shift cut out going into gear that is an indication that your lower shift cable or shift mechanism needs a replacement or is hung upI can get it to shift without stalling but have to move the shift lever extremely fast.
Can’t tell what RPM it’s at because tach is broken… that’s another thing I gotta fix. I just got the idle to where it was smooth but not too rich/lean.What RPM is the engine idling at? You disconnected the shift interrupter wire and the shift cable to the drive and it is stalling?
Dump some gas down the carb if it fires it’s the carb , send it back get your money back. If properly rebuilt it should run ok out of boxSmall update:
The carb I attempted to rebuild let the boat idle perfectly but stalled at throttle. I was so fed up with it I ordered a rebuilt carb from guaranteed carburetors.
Finally got it in today, and installed it. The boat won’t even fire now when cranking. The float bowl is filled, accelerator pump works with throttle pumps, and I’m getting spark. It’s hesitating like it wants to fire but doesn’t.
The idle speed screw is set two turns from bottoming out. The electronic choke is connected properly and seems to be working (choke plate opens as engine gets warmer cranking). All the linkages look fine. I can’t find a single thing wrong.
After a few minutes of cranking with the new carb I realized my plugs were horribly fouled. I replaced them, and still nothing. Sputters a little while cranking and that’s it.
At this point I’m done with it, and don’t even want to look at the boat anymore. It’s disappointing to say and I appreciate all you guys’s help but this problem is clearly outside my knowledge.
If anyone has any good shop recommendations that can work on these engines in the central IN area it’s much appreciated.
I dumped gas down the carb and the engine sputters, and shakes a little bit like the cylinder is firing. However no amount of cranking can get the engine to actually fully fire and idle.Dump some gas down the carb if it fires it’s the carb , send it back get your money back. If properly rebuilt it should run ok out of box
If it doesn’t run u have fuel delivery or spark issue
If you are open to it send your old carb to mikes carbs and have home rebuild it
The black wire is the points wireI've thought about this more and there's definitely something weird going on with the points/ignition coil. I'm going to re-iterate my previous post because it was a bit scatterbrained:
1. I'm attaching an ohm meter between the two sides of the points.
2. No matter whether the points are physically closed, or physically open, my meter indicates a direct short between the two.
3. When I disconnect The black wire that runs from bottom of distributor to my coil (see pic above), step 2 is no longer true. Instead, the meter indicates the points are open when physically open, and shorted when physically closed.
So... basically that black wire going to the ignition coil is grounded to the distributor body for some reason. I don't think this is right. I don't see any physical damage on the black wire that'd be shorting to distributor body. Could a bad ignition coil cause this?
Ok. So when this black points wire is attached to the (-) side of the coil, it's shorting the points together even when they're physically open. This makes no sense to me.The black wire is the points wire
Then you have an issue in your cap and rotor. If you place the cap end of the high voltage wire (coil to cap wire) 3/8" inch of an engine ground crank it and have spark , but don't have spark at the plugs see if cap and rotor are still making good contact.I'm messing around with testing spark. It seems I now have no spark at any of the plugs, but I do have spark coming off the coil tower.
Hooking an ohm meter to my points... even when the points are open, I'm getting continuity between them when my black wire coming off the distributor is connected to the coil (see pics). Is this correct? When I disconnect this black wire, the points are not shorted when open, and short when touch together.
if wire is chaffed where it goes through distributor this will happenOk. So when this black points wire is attached to the (-) side of the coil, it's shorting the points together even when they're physically open. This makes no sense to me.
The wire is merely a conductor to the points. The points are an electo-mechanical switch. When the points close (path to ground), the coil charges by creating a magnetic field. As the points open, the magnetic field collapses and that is what provides the high voltage from the coil secondaryOk. So when this black points wire is attached to the (-) side of the coil, it's shorting the points together even when they're physically open. This makes no sense to me.