Richard Hodge2
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2011
- Messages
- 80
- Reaction score
- 0
OK Bob B. I'll try to give as many details, but please forgive wordiness. I have a 2010 Mercury 150 Optimax EFI with about 16 hours on it. Just bought the boat(189 Sport) in July.
First few outings it started fine and ran well but the engine oil tank bleed was lose. I tightened it down but did not purge the oil line so next time out got the 4 beeps. Bled the tank until it oozed out and tightened it down.......no further oil issues. The next few outings I noticed the engine didn't want to start very quickly and to the point it wore down the battery some. Once started it runs like a champ, but is smoky at first. I always squeeze the bulb before I try to start and push in the key when turned on and hold it in for a minute. The bulb seems to need re-squeezing with every start. My first question is....is this normal?
Today was a nice weekday so I went out to run some fuel through and sat on the ramp and took about 5 minutes to get it started. Got it started and pulled it over to the courtesy dock, tied up and shut the engine off. When I returned from parking that thing would not start. I must have killed 45 minutes looking and scratching and trying to figure out what it could be. I did not smell fuel, yet it seemed flooded. Another boater offering sympathy said it seemed fuel starved. Actually I think I flooded it. Trailered it home and put the battery charger on it and the darned thing started up after a few cranks. I have been running Startron in the fuel and this particular tank of fuel came from a boat dock that says no ethanol. Having read your posts though I've gone and bought the large can of Seafoam which I had intended to use today with additional fuel. So Bob, I'm soon to take the boat in for winterizing and wanted to have them also check the sluggish starting issue out. I'd like to communicate well with them so I am asking you .....what should I look for and what info should I pass to the service department and should I ask them to look into anything in particular?
Sorry for the bathroom reading Bob. I just know I've seen so many older engines fire up so easily, and this one used to, that I am wondering if I have an issue that I need to deal with early in the engine's life.
Please help me wise one!
First few outings it started fine and ran well but the engine oil tank bleed was lose. I tightened it down but did not purge the oil line so next time out got the 4 beeps. Bled the tank until it oozed out and tightened it down.......no further oil issues. The next few outings I noticed the engine didn't want to start very quickly and to the point it wore down the battery some. Once started it runs like a champ, but is smoky at first. I always squeeze the bulb before I try to start and push in the key when turned on and hold it in for a minute. The bulb seems to need re-squeezing with every start. My first question is....is this normal?
Today was a nice weekday so I went out to run some fuel through and sat on the ramp and took about 5 minutes to get it started. Got it started and pulled it over to the courtesy dock, tied up and shut the engine off. When I returned from parking that thing would not start. I must have killed 45 minutes looking and scratching and trying to figure out what it could be. I did not smell fuel, yet it seemed flooded. Another boater offering sympathy said it seemed fuel starved. Actually I think I flooded it. Trailered it home and put the battery charger on it and the darned thing started up after a few cranks. I have been running Startron in the fuel and this particular tank of fuel came from a boat dock that says no ethanol. Having read your posts though I've gone and bought the large can of Seafoam which I had intended to use today with additional fuel. So Bob, I'm soon to take the boat in for winterizing and wanted to have them also check the sluggish starting issue out. I'd like to communicate well with them so I am asking you .....what should I look for and what info should I pass to the service department and should I ask them to look into anything in particular?
Sorry for the bathroom reading Bob. I just know I've seen so many older engines fire up so easily, and this one used to, that I am wondering if I have an issue that I need to deal with early in the engine's life.
Please help me wise one!