Thanks Fitz. Man, the quality of info on here is so much better than THT. I agree I need to take it back to professional. Could I harm anything by adjusting idle screw myself? Assuming I make note of how many turns I've taken in either direction so I can always change back. I don't really blame my guy because it idles fine at first after starting the engine. It's after going up on plane and coming back down that the problems start to occur. Fitz- is this telling of other symptoms?
I get it restarted by just letting it rev up in neutral for a bit longer than normal, and having a real quick transition from neutral into gear. It sounds like it's almost gonna die then it gets going.Was told by my mechanic over the phone that the carbs probably need to be adjusted a little richer to give the engine more fuel on the 2 cylinders. He also said it probably works better when I'm just getting it started up because I'm using the choke and flooding the engine with gas. Which made sense then, but now I'm realizing every time I start it up I'm using the choke so that doesn't make sense. I also let it warm up for a bit when just getting it started as opposed to restarting when I'm fishing and anxious to get another drift in.
Fitz,This one turned out to be a total curveball. My mechanic and I checked it out and he noticed something did not look right in the oil line. Not sure the proper technical term but it's the small plastic tube oil goes through on the lower port side of the engine. Upon further inspection, we determined the stopper valve for this oil line was shot. Again, I don't know the proper term, but it's a valve used to keep the flow of oil going one way, so oil enters the engine and fuel does not mix with the oil directly. We pumped the primer ball and the valve was leaking gas. What was happening was this valve wasn't working properly and fuel was mixing with the oil. Took an oil sample and it wasn't thick and green like it should be, but liquid and somewhat clear. Replaced the valve, took out the old oil and replaced it with fresh oil. Pumped bad oil gas mixture through the tube till it was pure oil, and ran the engine for a while until we started seeing some smoke. So I was running my engine on a oil gas mixture for a while, great. Luckily it's not prime fishing season and I was away for 2 weeks so I haven't put a ton of hours on it.
Quote from: "CTsalt12"Fitz,This one turned out to be a total curveball. My mechanic and I checked it out and he noticed something did not look right in the oil line. Not sure the proper technical term but it's the small plastic tube oil goes through on the lower port side of the engine. Upon further inspection, we determined the stopper valve for this oil line was shot. Again, I don't know the proper term, but it's a valve used to keep the flow of oil going one way, so oil enters the engine and fuel does not mix with the oil directly. We pumped the primer ball and the valve was leaking gas. What was happening was this valve wasn't working properly and fuel was mixing with the oil. Took an oil sample and it wasn't thick and green like it should be, but liquid and somewhat clear. Replaced the valve, took out the old oil and replaced it with fresh oil. Pumped bad oil gas mixture through the tube till it was pure oil, and ran the engine for a while until we started seeing some smoke. So I was running my engine on a oil gas mixture for a while, great. Luckily it's not prime fishing season and I was away for 2 weeks so I haven't put a ton of hours on it.I know exactly which valve it is. It's brass check valve that meters the oil flow from the oil pump and oil tank into the main fuel line leading to the carbs. I found out mine was bad because one of my water separator sight bowls turned blue with oil like it had pre-mix in it when it should have been straight fuel. It was back feeding through gravity back into the fuel hose. When I would crank the engine up it smoke like crazy on the super concentration of oil and gas in the filter.