Scubasteve007
Recruit
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2012
- Messages
- 5
Hi guys,
I have a 1993 Evinrude 150 Intruder on my bass boat. When I bought it I was told that before I have a problem with my VRO pump I should bypass (I think) the pump and mix my own oil/fuel directly in the tank.
I didn't do this because the pump works and since my old boat had to have the fuel pre-mixed I thought of the VRO a luxury and didn't want to give it up!
Anyways, it still works but my problem is that at start-up I smoke out anybody near me. After warming it up and going for a blast it doesn't smoke but when it sits for a while it happens all over again. The smoke clouds that is, and since it is a bass boat there are many times throughout the day where I am on the electric trolling motor for an hour or more and then have to flash up 'old Smokey' to get to the next fishing spot.
A mechanic friend said not to worry about it, as a little too much oil is better than none at all so by seeing smoke I know it's getting oil! I assume that the VRO pump is just giving it a little too much oil but is that worth worrying about?
I don't really want to bypass the VRO and I don't want to buy a new VRO pump so my question to all you experts is should I do anything about it or just keep on going the way I have been?
Thanks for your answers to this pretty vague question!
Steve
I have a 1993 Evinrude 150 Intruder on my bass boat. When I bought it I was told that before I have a problem with my VRO pump I should bypass (I think) the pump and mix my own oil/fuel directly in the tank.
I didn't do this because the pump works and since my old boat had to have the fuel pre-mixed I thought of the VRO a luxury and didn't want to give it up!
Anyways, it still works but my problem is that at start-up I smoke out anybody near me. After warming it up and going for a blast it doesn't smoke but when it sits for a while it happens all over again. The smoke clouds that is, and since it is a bass boat there are many times throughout the day where I am on the electric trolling motor for an hour or more and then have to flash up 'old Smokey' to get to the next fishing spot.
A mechanic friend said not to worry about it, as a little too much oil is better than none at all so by seeing smoke I know it's getting oil! I assume that the VRO pump is just giving it a little too much oil but is that worth worrying about?
I don't really want to bypass the VRO and I don't want to buy a new VRO pump so my question to all you experts is should I do anything about it or just keep on going the way I have been?
Thanks for your answers to this pretty vague question!
Steve