Jump to content

MrGiggles

OAF Fishing Contributor
  • Posts

    1,273
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    2

Everything posted by MrGiggles

  1. Funny you mention that. I'm closing on a 30x60 building here in town next Friday that would make an excellent shop space. One of those word of mouth deals that I wasn't really expecting or ready for, but I will likely never find a deal like it again, with real estate doing what it is. I would like to start working out of it on my own, doing automotive but perhaps marine as well. What I'm lacking there is experience. Cars kind of suck to work on, I prefer outboards and boats. Wish you were closer, it's an hour and a half up there. This is our slow time of year and it wouldn't be a big deal to take a couple days off every week. I'll have to do a little thinking about it, the extra money and experience may be well worth it, if you were serious.
  2. Got the pumps replaced, prop changed, and new cables routed. Fuel pressure improved and it seems to be picking it up from the tank better. Hoping to have it back out on Sunday.
  3. For every one of those, there are many, many, others that lost their posterior.
  4. I think the well established coins (ETH, BTC) are solid long term investments. All of the same rules from the stock market apply, diversify, DCAing, etc.. You could read about crypto for weeks and still not really understand it. Pretty complicated stuff that I haven't even began to understand. Approach it with your brain (like anything else), don't dump your life savings into DOGE or SHIB or whatever happens to be coin of the week. Those are fine if you're into high risk, high reward plays, not the way to go for steady growth.
  5. Brush piles hold crappie year round. Which ones depend on the time of year. Mouths of coves and main lake for winter/summer, and in coves near spawning grounds in the spring and fall. If brush piles aren't producing in the winter, you can also follow the river channel and look for schools of shad with your side imaging. Get right on top of them and drop a spoon, jig and plastic, or jigging rap into it. Don't be surprised if you hook a white or walleye. Slow is the name of the game in the winter. While fishing brush, I'll get right over the top of the pile, drop a jig down in it, and pull it up half a crank at a time, pausing in between. They'll usually thump it on the pause. You'll want weedless jigs, and a rod that's sensitive enough for you to be able to tell the difference between a limb and a crappie. If you're getting caught on a limb on the way up, don't jerk, let the jig fall a little bit and try again, it'll come through. If you sink the hook in, you'll never get it back. Brush piles are a lot of trial and error, if you aren't getting anything on one pile, hit the next one and keep moving. If you haven't, load the MDC waypoints onto your graph. Many don't have signs, and it makes them way easier to find even if they do. Standing timber along the river channel can be dynamite in the winter too. Don't forget bridge pilings either.
  6. You'll crap your pants when you see the prices on some of the stuff in there. It's cheaper to buy a whole module assembly for 1000 bucks than it is to piece meal it with new pumps, float, seals, etc. if you're buying it all from Merc.
  7. So it has a water cooled mini fuel tank deal that Merc calls a fuel sending module, with both a low and high pressure pump inside, all electric. No mechanical pump, and it's all contained inside the FSM. All of the screens are clear, the lift pump will pull fuel without a problem out of the tank, through all of the hoses and plumbing that it normally would. I guess it's possible that the float switch was sticking, I'll need to inspect it closer when I out the new pumps in. I did check the fuel pressure the other day, which was acceptable, but that doesn't mean much at idle.
  8. I pulled the FSM apart, did not really find much, the low pressure pump seems to work just fine and the float is doing what it's supposed to. I did find that the high pressure pump seal is not in great shape. I'm going to replace the pumps anyway, 10 years is a pretty good run for EFI pumps, especially in this environment. I'm also going to do away with the Mercury quick connector on the tank. I had some of the same trouble with the Suzuki, makes me wonder if it's on the boat side.
  9. Maiden voyage went pretty well but wasn't without trouble. The low pressure fuel pump doesn't seem to be working right, if at all. Prime it up and it'll go for a while, start losing power, prime it up, rinse and repeat. I'll need to pull the FSM and see if the float switch is working correctly. The boat sits probably 2 inches lower in the water, not the best but even if I stand on the transom, the splashwell drain is still above water. I got 29mph briefly bouncing off the rev limiter, running the 12P pontoon prop, still waiting for the hub kit that'll fit the 17P 4 blade that I have laying around. Should be about right for this setup. Pomme gave up a few crappie too, so not a bad trip.
  10. I've had a few but don't usually keep anything for the long haul. Like Wrench says Merc's parts availability is annoying. I suspect that stems from their outsourcing of powerheads. They had a partnership with Yamaha going way back that dissolved in 2006, and their recent small motors are made by Tohatsu. You see the same thing with other companies that outsource.
  11. Sold
  12. There are only a few battery manufacturers that supply each brand. Interstate, Everstart, Pro series and Duralast are all made by Johnson Controls. Super Start is made by Deka. By that logic I figure you might as well get the one that's cheapest. They all suck and 4-5 years is about all you'll get if you're lucky. With all of the equipment here on the farm, I've never seen one brand hold up better than any other. I really don't see the appeal of AGMs either, with prices approaching that of lithiums. Check out used Valence batteries on Ebay. They're pulled from medical equipment and a lot of people use them for solar, RVs, big boats, etc. Pretty reasonable for what they are.
  13. Charging issue was just a bad fusible link. Working well now. The power trim issue has something to do with the trim limit module. It can be taken off since there is nothing for the cowl to crush on my rig if it's trimmed too high. I did a proper compression test and came up with 175psi on #4. The rest are closer to 190, but it isn't broken in yet.
  14. Walmart 29DCs are my go-tos until lithium comes down a little. Although in a canoe I would certainly give lithiums a look for weight if nothing else.
  15. I thought the same thing, but there was no corresponding damage to the head. I'm certain preignition/detonation was the cause, but the cause of that is what I'm not sure of. A heavy shot of ethanol will do it for sure, especially since these don't have an 02 sensor or any way to monitor A/F ratios. A car would've run like crap, pegged the fuel trims and set a lean code, but would be undamaged. One thing that did cross my mind is if it could be related to the FSM issues on these. Any sort of problem there will flood #4, but I haven't had any issues there yet. I looked at replacement fuel pumps and about fainted, good thing there's aftermarket.
  16. By this. I only did a real quick compression test with a half dead battery before starting that yielded 150. It was less than 100 before.
  17. That's interesting. In the automotive world the rearmost cylinders are always hurt the worst from overheating because of what I said, it takes longer for coolant to circulate around them. Just goes to show that an engine is not an engine, they behave different when turned on end. I did take a close look at the oil and it was right on the money as far as level goes, but I did change it after running for a couple minutes. I think lack of lube would've been evident by scoring on the piston or bearing damage. Everything in this engine was beautiful, plastigauged right at .002.
  18. Yep, no smoking gun that I've found. Injectors tested and flow checked, no problems. That is the only thing I can think of that would've only affected just one cylinder. My only hypothesis is that perhaps #4 was fed a straight shot of ethanol that settled in the rail, being that it is fed from the bottom with a check valve right under #4 injector, but I think that is a stretch. Overheating would make sense since the thermostat is on top of the block, #4 is the last to get cooling water, but there was no scoring or discoloration on the piston to back that up, and #3 looked identical.
  19. That's what you read on the internet. Proof is kind of in the pudding here though, this one only having 300 some hours and being hurt pretty bad. It remains to be seen if I'm happy with it. I don't even know if it'll spin a prop yet.
  20. We'll see I guess. There's still quite a discrepancy in your experience and everyone else. People seem to think the world of them and the hour meters run into the thousands. Bad fuel is the only cause of the failure that I can see. I opened up the FSM and dumped what was in it, looked pretty brown, but the motor has been sitting for months at this point. I isn't charging so I've got to figure that out. Might need to bring that alternator to a rebuilder.
  21. I'm selling, not buying. Truth be told I don't really use it that much.
  22. An opportunity sort of popped up and I'm letting some things go to get some money together. Livescope is one of them. It's about 6 months old, no issues, just the transducer and black box. I have the original packaging and the trolling motor mount as well. I figure $1200 is a fair price since they're $1499 plus tax.
  23. Mud bees had clogged the tell tale hose on either side of the tee, and then somehow made it through an 18" bendy hose and managed to also plug the inlet on the FSM. Got them all cleared out and it's working well now. Not much else to do until I get the cable adapters.
  24. I tried muffs first with the same result. Steady stream out of the water pressure hose but a few drips out of the tell tale. This motor also has a flush port, I'm not sure if you're able to run the motor with it, but when I tried using that, it acted like there was a blockage and there was no water exiting the lower unit. The manual shows that water first goes around the exhaust manifold, which is where the supply for the FSM is tapped in, the telltale is tapped into the outlet from the FSM. Mud daubers may have gotten into that FSM while it was off. There is also a screen on the inlet fitting that I should check.
  25. That's that. I was going to try and hit the water tonight, but I don't have the Merc cable adapters for the controls. It is pumping water but there is some sort of blockage in the telltale circuit. Whizzes like crazy out of the water pressure hose. I also goofed and forgot to install the retaining ring on the upper crank seal. Not a big deal, just need to pull the flywheel again.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.