Last fall my 90hp Evinrude VRO V4 engine started bogging at high throttle. I had limp it at about 1500 rpm to the launch. I took it to the marina to check it out and fix it. I figured it was because of old gas considering it doesn't get used much. Later the marina said it was old gas in the tank. Drained it, cleaned the carb, put in new plugs, and said it was ready for winter.
Last week I put in fresh gas since last Fall, hooked up the ear muffs to the water inlet, primed it with the squeeze bulb, after several cranks (ignition switch pushed in for choke) it reluctantly came to life. I ran it at mid range to keep it from stalling until it warmed up. It blew a lot of oil which I thought was residual from sitting. After several minutes the rpms started to climb on its own. The engine got smoother then rough then smooth again. I figured it was enough and had to get home.
Yesterday I went to crank it and nothing happened. Battery was good so I tried to hand spin it thinking the worse. It was tight. I pulled the plugs to relieve the compression for turning and noticed the #1 cylinder plug had fused the tips together. I immediately pulled the head and saw the damage. The top of the piston had melted in an area the size of a quarter with lots of aluminum pellets and chunks in the cylinder. Aluminum is smeared on the cylinder walls and no sign of residual oil. The other 3 cylinders and plugs appear fine. What happened?
I have to admit the ear muffs were shaken off but only for a few seconds. I know what happens to the impeller and cylinders with no water so I shut the engine off and replaced immediately. I'm not convinced this caused the meltdown. Could have this been an ongoing issue since last year and finally rearing its ugly head? This engine always started hard and had issues since I bought it 6 years ago. One thread here says it could be lack of oil in the high rpm range due to a clogged high rpm jet in the carb?
Oh yeah, never heard an overheat alarm.
Last week I put in fresh gas since last Fall, hooked up the ear muffs to the water inlet, primed it with the squeeze bulb, after several cranks (ignition switch pushed in for choke) it reluctantly came to life. I ran it at mid range to keep it from stalling until it warmed up. It blew a lot of oil which I thought was residual from sitting. After several minutes the rpms started to climb on its own. The engine got smoother then rough then smooth again. I figured it was enough and had to get home.
Yesterday I went to crank it and nothing happened. Battery was good so I tried to hand spin it thinking the worse. It was tight. I pulled the plugs to relieve the compression for turning and noticed the #1 cylinder plug had fused the tips together. I immediately pulled the head and saw the damage. The top of the piston had melted in an area the size of a quarter with lots of aluminum pellets and chunks in the cylinder. Aluminum is smeared on the cylinder walls and no sign of residual oil. The other 3 cylinders and plugs appear fine. What happened?
I have to admit the ear muffs were shaken off but only for a few seconds. I know what happens to the impeller and cylinders with no water so I shut the engine off and replaced immediately. I'm not convinced this caused the meltdown. Could have this been an ongoing issue since last year and finally rearing its ugly head? This engine always started hard and had issues since I bought it 6 years ago. One thread here says it could be lack of oil in the high rpm range due to a clogged high rpm jet in the carb?
Oh yeah, never heard an overheat alarm.