I recently bought a jon boat for duck hunting that came with an “as-is” 2003 60 HP 4 stroke F60TLRB engine. The engine was hard to start and once it gets running and warms up it would run fine at idle. Any attempt to increase throttle would result in coughing, choking and the engine would stall.
This site has been an excellent resource for someone like me just starting out. I changed the fuel tank, fuel lines and primer bulb. Also changed the water separator and the fuel filter mounted to the engine. There was a lot of water in the separator. I changed the spark plugs as well. The old spark plugs actually looked really good. Oil is clean and had been recently changed.
Once I did all of that, it starts a little easier and I can rev up in neutral with no problem. Once its put in gear though when I increase the throttle it still coughs, chokes and stalls if I add throttle too fast. If I add throttle very slowly and let the engine RPMs catch up, I can eventually get it to increase to WOT.
My process has been to replace the easiest/cheapest things that may be causing the problem but so far it hasn’t solved my issue. I just ordered a service manual that I should get in a week or so. My question is – is it worth the effort to remove and inspect the diaphragm in the prime starter assembly or should I just move forward with removing and cleaning the 4 carbs? Although I am well experienced with small engine repair, the 4 carb stack looks a little intimidating. I don’t have access to an ultrasonic cleaner to clean the carb parts, which seems to be what many folks recommend. I would likely take it do a mechanic which I would expect will set me back several hundred $$.
Any thoughts on other things to try before I undertake the carburetor removal would be appreciated. Thanks in advance.
This site has been an excellent resource for someone like me just starting out. I changed the fuel tank, fuel lines and primer bulb. Also changed the water separator and the fuel filter mounted to the engine. There was a lot of water in the separator. I changed the spark plugs as well. The old spark plugs actually looked really good. Oil is clean and had been recently changed.
Once I did all of that, it starts a little easier and I can rev up in neutral with no problem. Once its put in gear though when I increase the throttle it still coughs, chokes and stalls if I add throttle too fast. If I add throttle very slowly and let the engine RPMs catch up, I can eventually get it to increase to WOT.
My process has been to replace the easiest/cheapest things that may be causing the problem but so far it hasn’t solved my issue. I just ordered a service manual that I should get in a week or so. My question is – is it worth the effort to remove and inspect the diaphragm in the prime starter assembly or should I just move forward with removing and cleaning the 4 carbs? Although I am well experienced with small engine repair, the 4 carb stack looks a little intimidating. I don’t have access to an ultrasonic cleaner to clean the carb parts, which seems to be what many folks recommend. I would likely take it do a mechanic which I would expect will set me back several hundred $$.
Any thoughts on other things to try before I undertake the carburetor removal would be appreciated. Thanks in advance.