colbysmith
Active member
Had a mechanical problem with my subject outboard the other day, and thought I'd share it here for reference. I came back a week ago from a great vacation in the San Juan Islands, where the boat ran fine. Then this past Saturday I took it out to a local lake back home, and again it ran fine. Then day before yesterday I took it out, it started, but then died. I was able to start it again, but barely keep it running. Lots of smoke, as if it were a 2-stroke with too much oil! Put it back on the trailer and brought it home to work on. Spent several hours trying to figure it out. It appeared to be running very rich as I was getting a lot of soot in the exhaust. Tried pulling coil wires, and could hardly tell a difference. Gave up as it was getting very late. Next day, pulled the plugs and they were black. I have a "code" reader for the engine, and the only code that showed in history was one for Lift Pump Timer. I really did not want to take it in to the shop if I could help it. Studied my Mercury Shop Manual for the engine, and then spent several hours on the internet. Finally came across this bulletin:
http://www.marinemechanic.com/merc/dist ... ooting.pdf
Reading thru it was mention of a Pressure Regulator reference hose in the Fuel Supply Module. Said If the line inside the FSM were to split, or become disconnected, fuel will be drawn into the intake causing the engine to run rich. Wasn't sure I wanted to tear into the FSM, but this sure sounded like the problem. Required pulling the outboards bottom shroud off, and removing the Fuel Supply Module to get into it. Sure enough, the reference hose was cracked. This is a tiny little hose and according to my local boat shop, caused by ethanol. Unfortunately, it's hard to find fuels without ethanol everywhere, so it is what it is!
Anyway, this must be a fairly common issue since Mercury has addressed it with the bulletin above. It's not that hard of a fix for anyone mechanically minded, but somewhat of a pain having to remove some things to get to it.
Here's another link that mentions the issue and has a fairly good diagram.
http://forums.iboats.com/forum/engine-r ... lems-fixed
Just glad the hose waited to split until I got home from the San Juans!!!
Colby
http://www.marinemechanic.com/merc/dist ... ooting.pdf
Reading thru it was mention of a Pressure Regulator reference hose in the Fuel Supply Module. Said If the line inside the FSM were to split, or become disconnected, fuel will be drawn into the intake causing the engine to run rich. Wasn't sure I wanted to tear into the FSM, but this sure sounded like the problem. Required pulling the outboards bottom shroud off, and removing the Fuel Supply Module to get into it. Sure enough, the reference hose was cracked. This is a tiny little hose and according to my local boat shop, caused by ethanol. Unfortunately, it's hard to find fuels without ethanol everywhere, so it is what it is!
Anyway, this must be a fairly common issue since Mercury has addressed it with the bulletin above. It's not that hard of a fix for anyone mechanically minded, but somewhat of a pain having to remove some things to get to it.
Here's another link that mentions the issue and has a fairly good diagram.
http://forums.iboats.com/forum/engine-r ... lems-fixed
Just glad the hose waited to split until I got home from the San Juans!!!
Colby