The last time I posted here my lower unit was broke, clutch dog I assume but I never got the bearing carrier out because the previous idiot owner welded it to the case instead of buying a new nut. Took it to 3 shops and they all refused to work on it, I grinded weld for days but still couldn't get it out so I just fished electric only reservoirs for two years.
My luck turned as I finally found a beautiful used lower unit close to me that wasn't selling for explain this to the wife money.
I put on a new water pump and slid the lower unit on. No issues at all, had to adjust the turnbuckle quite a bit in order to get her to shift correctly but I finally got er adjusted and she shifted in the test tank perfectly!
Drove an hour thirty to the nearest unlimited HP lake and was super excited to see my son's face as he experienced bow lift and running on plane for the first time!! I've owned Bass boats that would gps in the 90's before but never had a gas rig once we had kids and money was needed in other areas of life.. But now he gets to experience one of the greatest feelings a guy can have!!
On this lake there's about a 200 yard cove that's a no wake zone that you need to putter through until you reach the no wake bouys and can open it up. The engine started rough but ran good once it was warm, normal 2 stroke stuff. It shifted into reverse, then forward and it ran really well. We ran trimmed down at around 12-1500 rpm's at around 5 mph until we hit those bouys and then hit the throttle lever forward. The boat lifted the bow and started to roll over, you could feel the back pad lifting up onto plane but then just stopped right there and stayed at 2000 rpm. I returned to neutral and did it again and again and again with the same result... She would stop at 2000 rpm and 10mph and just stay there. We drove 4 miles and it never tried to surge past that mark. My son was able to reach back and squeeze the primer bulb whole we were at WOT, no change at all. The bulb wasn't hard but also wasn't sucked in either. He could feel fuel flowing through it and he was able to pump it a few times but the engine didn't rev or surge or die... Nothing changed. Ever time you would push the shift lever forward it would slide into gear and start to accelerate as it should but once it hit, say 10:00 if your looking at the shifter box from the side and neutral is 12:00 then it would click into forward at 11 and would accelerate until 10ish then stop accelerating. You can leave the lever there or continue to push it to it's max position but the engine wouldn't even to to rev any higher. If you started from neutral and pushed in the choke then shifted into gear with the choke pushed in you would reach that magic 2000rpm spot quicker on the clock image I described earlier but it still wouldn't go past 2000 rpm.
I went to an on lake marina and bought a new primer bulb, not because I thought mine was bad but it was the cheapest thing I could try that would allow the use of their dock. I changed the primer bulb and at the same time put the 3 blade Suzuki prop that was on the boat originally back on to see if the 4 blade prop I had on was just to big to spin. It shouldn't be, I'm not new to performance Bass boats and the 3 blade Suzuki prop that came with the engine is 14 1/4x24 pitch. The 4 blade I was running is 13 1/2x24 pitch. It shouldn't of made that big of a difference but was worth a try. I got the stock prop installed and left the marina. It ran at slow speed really well, I got into open water and slowly gave it throttle and BAMM... At around 1500 rpm's I spun the prop. It sucked that it happened BUT when it spun on its hub the engine also revved to 4 grand or more before it settled back down to an idle. That at least showed me that I didn't do something to the throttle linkage when I was in there adjusting the shift linkage turnbuckle. I limped back to the dock and switched back to the 4 blade prop and went on the rest of the day the exact same as before. She would jump out of the hole pretty good but would stop at the exact same rpm every single time. It was a brand new digital tach that I am considering returning because it sucked, I'm not 100% sure of it's accuracy but I know the rpm's always stopped at the same number, 2000. In real numbers it might of been 1850 or 2200,I don't know that but it was the same Everytime... That I know for certain. It also wasn't higher than 2500, I've been a mechanic for 25 years and I can hear rpm ranges and it wasn't much over 2 grand if at all.
Would switching to a twin stick fix this issue you think? Or did spinning the hub and bouncing off the rev limiter prove that it isn't a linkage issue? I would think that it did but I'm not sure yet. It only happened that one time. I know the motor has no issues at all revving like normal while using the throttle handle.
Any ideas fellas?!?
1992 Suzuki dt150 on a 1991 Ranger 397v Apache.
It's a carbed model. Two years ago when I blew the lower unit and knew she wasn't going to be run for awhile I removed the 3 bowl drain plugs on the carbs and got old gas out of the carburators. The engine lit off first turn of the key in the test tank in the driveway when I got the new lower unit installed. It must be something stupid. I read a 10 page thread on this forum last night from a guy named dk (I think) his engine was fuel injected though so not sure how much of the advice given to him effects me, some like the filters and such, which I'll check today.
Thanks for the help!!
My luck turned as I finally found a beautiful used lower unit close to me that wasn't selling for explain this to the wife money.
I put on a new water pump and slid the lower unit on. No issues at all, had to adjust the turnbuckle quite a bit in order to get her to shift correctly but I finally got er adjusted and she shifted in the test tank perfectly!
Drove an hour thirty to the nearest unlimited HP lake and was super excited to see my son's face as he experienced bow lift and running on plane for the first time!! I've owned Bass boats that would gps in the 90's before but never had a gas rig once we had kids and money was needed in other areas of life.. But now he gets to experience one of the greatest feelings a guy can have!!
On this lake there's about a 200 yard cove that's a no wake zone that you need to putter through until you reach the no wake bouys and can open it up. The engine started rough but ran good once it was warm, normal 2 stroke stuff. It shifted into reverse, then forward and it ran really well. We ran trimmed down at around 12-1500 rpm's at around 5 mph until we hit those bouys and then hit the throttle lever forward. The boat lifted the bow and started to roll over, you could feel the back pad lifting up onto plane but then just stopped right there and stayed at 2000 rpm. I returned to neutral and did it again and again and again with the same result... She would stop at 2000 rpm and 10mph and just stay there. We drove 4 miles and it never tried to surge past that mark. My son was able to reach back and squeeze the primer bulb whole we were at WOT, no change at all. The bulb wasn't hard but also wasn't sucked in either. He could feel fuel flowing through it and he was able to pump it a few times but the engine didn't rev or surge or die... Nothing changed. Ever time you would push the shift lever forward it would slide into gear and start to accelerate as it should but once it hit, say 10:00 if your looking at the shifter box from the side and neutral is 12:00 then it would click into forward at 11 and would accelerate until 10ish then stop accelerating. You can leave the lever there or continue to push it to it's max position but the engine wouldn't even to to rev any higher. If you started from neutral and pushed in the choke then shifted into gear with the choke pushed in you would reach that magic 2000rpm spot quicker on the clock image I described earlier but it still wouldn't go past 2000 rpm.
I went to an on lake marina and bought a new primer bulb, not because I thought mine was bad but it was the cheapest thing I could try that would allow the use of their dock. I changed the primer bulb and at the same time put the 3 blade Suzuki prop that was on the boat originally back on to see if the 4 blade prop I had on was just to big to spin. It shouldn't be, I'm not new to performance Bass boats and the 3 blade Suzuki prop that came with the engine is 14 1/4x24 pitch. The 4 blade I was running is 13 1/2x24 pitch. It shouldn't of made that big of a difference but was worth a try. I got the stock prop installed and left the marina. It ran at slow speed really well, I got into open water and slowly gave it throttle and BAMM... At around 1500 rpm's I spun the prop. It sucked that it happened BUT when it spun on its hub the engine also revved to 4 grand or more before it settled back down to an idle. That at least showed me that I didn't do something to the throttle linkage when I was in there adjusting the shift linkage turnbuckle. I limped back to the dock and switched back to the 4 blade prop and went on the rest of the day the exact same as before. She would jump out of the hole pretty good but would stop at the exact same rpm every single time. It was a brand new digital tach that I am considering returning because it sucked, I'm not 100% sure of it's accuracy but I know the rpm's always stopped at the same number, 2000. In real numbers it might of been 1850 or 2200,I don't know that but it was the same Everytime... That I know for certain. It also wasn't higher than 2500, I've been a mechanic for 25 years and I can hear rpm ranges and it wasn't much over 2 grand if at all.
Would switching to a twin stick fix this issue you think? Or did spinning the hub and bouncing off the rev limiter prove that it isn't a linkage issue? I would think that it did but I'm not sure yet. It only happened that one time. I know the motor has no issues at all revving like normal while using the throttle handle.
Any ideas fellas?!?
1992 Suzuki dt150 on a 1991 Ranger 397v Apache.
It's a carbed model. Two years ago when I blew the lower unit and knew she wasn't going to be run for awhile I removed the 3 bowl drain plugs on the carbs and got old gas out of the carburators. The engine lit off first turn of the key in the test tank in the driveway when I got the new lower unit installed. It must be something stupid. I read a 10 page thread on this forum last night from a guy named dk (I think) his engine was fuel injected though so not sure how much of the advice given to him effects me, some like the filters and such, which I'll check today.
Thanks for the help!!
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