Postby Merkinbrumsky » September 23rd, 2024, 9:25 am
Made it up to the boat after work yesterday for a few hours. Pulled the flame arrestors, they weren’t to bad but cleaned them with some engine degreaser and the hose and put them aside to dry. Confirmed throttle plates were open all the way at wot on the sticks. I’m pretty sure carbs are the mercarbs, not 100% sure but they have a mercury tag mounted on them, and only one idle screw which is what I read distinguishes them from a Rochester, maybe that’s not correct? Any way, I didn’t have replacement screen for the carbs so I didn’t go any further there but did find that the coil wire on the stbd engine was loose. Aha, i thought. Tightened the wire and took the boat for a quick run. No joy. Back to the dock. Pulled the fuel filters and drained. Port side looked great, stbd side however was about 80% water! So I immediately started think about how to deal with this. There’s approximately 100L in that tank. Should I try and get a hose in the bottom of the tank and pump until water turns to fuel?, pump the entire tank dry?, run it and keep changing fuel filters,? Or? By the time I got the filters changed it was dark and I had to head back home for an appointment today. It didn’t occur to me until I was on the way home that I should have switched the crossover and run both engines of the port tank to test. I will get back up this week and give that a try. I have always stored both tanks full. Any ideas on how all this fuel got contaminated? What next? Thanks
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