2003 Seafarer 228, 92 gal main tank, no aux tank, and 2003 Yamaha FXTR 225.
First time out, after doing some work on the boat/engine (which I'll describe below), the following occurred: After idling along for a period of time as in trolling, the engine loses power and stalls upon throttle up to get back on plane. Restart only gets a brief run at about 500 rpm, drops to zero. Will not restart after that. I checked the fuel squeeze bulb and it was very soft. I pumped the bulb, which took about 10 pumps to firm, and the engine started. I was close to the dock so tried it again - idle along 10-15 minutes, power up, fuel starvation, bulb soft.
Once I do get it started and on plane, it will run as long as I want it to. It is only after running at or below 1400 rpm or so that the bulb goes soft and eventual fuel starvation. I did notice that before the engine idled at 600 rpm, now 500 rpm.
No hint of a fuel leak anywhere in the engine cowl, battery box area, or bilge. Not the slightest fuel odor anywhere.
The work I did prior to this included: Changed engine mounted fuel filter, changed hull mounted water separator, replace the old squeeze bulb as the old one was hard and cracked.
Here's the kicker though - after doing all that, I was having trouble getting fuel to the engine with the squeeze bulb. Every time I quit pumping the fuel ran back down into the tank. After some research it seemed the culprit to that might be the anti-siphon valve on top the fuel pickup tube. Took a look at it and it was gunked and I could not get all that out, so obtained a new anti-siphon valve from the local Grady/Yamaha dealer.
Noted the new anti-siphon valve spring was much stronger and it took more force (suction) to open it.
Prior to this "work", the engine always ran strong, never stalled or cut out. It could be something totally different, like maybe a fuel pump, but the coincidence would be awfully strong.
I did notice that before the engine idled at 600 rpm, now 500 rpm.
That said, would a weak fuel pump show up now, with a new and much tighter anti-siphon valve installed?
Could I possibly have bought an anti-siphon valve that is for a much larger engine or twins?
What else could it possibly be?
Hope to put it on a trailer this weekend and try to figure it out. (I think I threw away the old anti-siphon valve)
Any suggestions appreciated
First time out, after doing some work on the boat/engine (which I'll describe below), the following occurred: After idling along for a period of time as in trolling, the engine loses power and stalls upon throttle up to get back on plane. Restart only gets a brief run at about 500 rpm, drops to zero. Will not restart after that. I checked the fuel squeeze bulb and it was very soft. I pumped the bulb, which took about 10 pumps to firm, and the engine started. I was close to the dock so tried it again - idle along 10-15 minutes, power up, fuel starvation, bulb soft.
Once I do get it started and on plane, it will run as long as I want it to. It is only after running at or below 1400 rpm or so that the bulb goes soft and eventual fuel starvation. I did notice that before the engine idled at 600 rpm, now 500 rpm.
No hint of a fuel leak anywhere in the engine cowl, battery box area, or bilge. Not the slightest fuel odor anywhere.
The work I did prior to this included: Changed engine mounted fuel filter, changed hull mounted water separator, replace the old squeeze bulb as the old one was hard and cracked.
Here's the kicker though - after doing all that, I was having trouble getting fuel to the engine with the squeeze bulb. Every time I quit pumping the fuel ran back down into the tank. After some research it seemed the culprit to that might be the anti-siphon valve on top the fuel pickup tube. Took a look at it and it was gunked and I could not get all that out, so obtained a new anti-siphon valve from the local Grady/Yamaha dealer.
Noted the new anti-siphon valve spring was much stronger and it took more force (suction) to open it.
Prior to this "work", the engine always ran strong, never stalled or cut out. It could be something totally different, like maybe a fuel pump, but the coincidence would be awfully strong.
I did notice that before the engine idled at 600 rpm, now 500 rpm.
That said, would a weak fuel pump show up now, with a new and much tighter anti-siphon valve installed?
Could I possibly have bought an anti-siphon valve that is for a much larger engine or twins?
What else could it possibly be?
Hope to put it on a trailer this weekend and try to figure it out. (I think I threw away the old anti-siphon valve)
Any suggestions appreciated