Dead in the water
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After months of storms and getting new canvas I finally got her out yesterday. Started fine at the dock , brought it up to temp and went out. About 20 minutes at wake speed she just died. Felt like it was running out of gas. I have 3/4 of a tank. Tried to start it and it would turn over and die. A couple times like that and then it wouldn't try to start at all. Got towed back to the dock.
I just ordered a new water separator fuel filter to see if the gas is gone. Anyone got another idea?
I just ordered a new water separator fuel filter to see if the gas is gone. Anyone got another idea?
Comments
My money is on water...water in gas makes my shop tons of money so my money is always on water because gasoline without water doesn't make me any money.
Money...had to say it one more time.
There is a product called Heet. Their slogan is "we make water burn" however it must be a minimum 1:1 ratio as the water.
If you can tilt the boat where the pickup is at the deepest point drain until you can't see any more water. Then add the heet. I'd fill the fuel filter with it as well if it's a spin on as there will be water your rail/line and injectors. If your engine has a Schrader valve I'd try suck it of that as well. Low pressure suction obviously
Speaking of cheap insurance, it might be worth considering a new fuel cap O-ring gasket...
PHENOMENAL amount of rainwater running over the fuel cap. Like gallons!
those O-rings are no joke.
It will make whatever water is left usable as fuel.
The water doesn't have to come from rain running down over your filler cap. The water can come from the ethanol in the fuel that is absorbing moisture from the humidity in the air. Some Marina tanks are famous for water contamination.
I'm not going to tell you how I know Captain Hooks(I think that's the name) on the Vaca Cut directly by the bridge in Marathon Florida is stupid contaminated with water.
When I buy gas for my equipment I always treat it with marine stabil at the pump. Store fuel tanks completely full. Prevention saves time and money.
On mowers and other equipment we'll try to avoid going into the carb by running the engine on carb cleaner or brake cleaner until fresh treated fuel is pulled into the carb. Obvously this is too dangerous in a boat as a back fire will flame up. If the engine is starting or at least hitting momentarily you may get lucky and can try starting it a few dozen times to attempt to pull engine fuel to start it. Filling the fuel filter with heet as mentioned before will fire it off as it mixes with the water in the system.
Just don't deep cycle the batteries and kill the starter. Only turn it over 15-20 seconds. After 2-3 attempts let it cool for a few minutes. After about 12 attempts let it cool for a 5-10 minutes.
If the boat is on a trailer you can get a cheap roll of vinyl tubing. Run the tubing from a bucket, in trough your bigle drain and attach to your fuel pickup.
Using an outboard primer you can siphon the fuel into a bucket and watch it drain safely, outside the boat away from any sparks or potential ignition sources.
I highly doubt you'll get more than a gallon. I save a gallon of two to feed the ground hornets aka yellow jackets every summer when I find their nest on my property. Free old contaminated gas for drowning those little angry insects after dark.
I could have still gotten a bad batch. I am going to give the hose a try. I just picked up 10 foot of fuel line. Might as well use it. Sure better than wasting all that gas.
Luckily water in the fuel isnt a terrible fix.
I had a bass boat that would take on water when waves would splash over the transom. Took me half a summer to figure out where the water was coming from.
They usually used a mechanical fuel pump that sat on the starboard side near the timing chain cover
verifying it is working probaby is a great idea. Cracking it open will hopefully let some of that water drain out of the carb so you can work some fresh treated fuel in there. Have plenty of rags or paper towels to catch any fuel that leaks out, let it all dry before starting. Although, it will probably be mostly water