I have had repeated problems with my Yamaha T9.9 dying out for no obvious reason and refusing to restart. Last year, I changed out all my fuel lines and put in an inline 10 micron filter. That seemed to help until
a few days ago when it suddenly died out on Lake Michigan. I thought it had run out of fuel, so I added a couple of gallons to my 6 gallon feed tank. It started and ran for about a half hour, enough to get me inside
the Racine Wisconsin harbor. Just as I got my main sail down, it died and
refused to restart. I would run for about 30 seconds and then slowly putter out. I was drifting towards the rock harbor wall and just had enough time to raise my main and tack up to a vacant mooring can.
I put in fresh gas into the empty tank at the beginning of the season about one month ago. The gas I added on the lake was fresh high octane
gas purchased a week ago. I did not add any Stabil to this last batch of
gas. My filter with a water separator did fall from it's bracket, but I don't know if this causes water to be introduced into the gas line. If it is water,
or bad gas, do I have to drain the whole tank (pain in the butt)? Does the
carbuertator have to be stripped down, or are there any other simpler measures I can take before tearing things apart? I bought the latest gas at a reliable neighborhood station, but could it be bad enough to cause this kind of failure? Does the higher octane gas help or hurt this kind of
problem?
I cannot depend on this engine anymore for reliable power. Even with a sailboat, I cannot bring it back off the lake and maneurver it to my slip
down the Root River and through a bridge with fixed opening times. I have owned a British Seagull and a Chrysler Sailor engines, both two strokes, and never had these kinds of problems. These four strokes are
like pampered children and can be dangerous when they go out at the wrong times.
Sherwin
a few days ago when it suddenly died out on Lake Michigan. I thought it had run out of fuel, so I added a couple of gallons to my 6 gallon feed tank. It started and ran for about a half hour, enough to get me inside
the Racine Wisconsin harbor. Just as I got my main sail down, it died and
refused to restart. I would run for about 30 seconds and then slowly putter out. I was drifting towards the rock harbor wall and just had enough time to raise my main and tack up to a vacant mooring can.
I put in fresh gas into the empty tank at the beginning of the season about one month ago. The gas I added on the lake was fresh high octane
gas purchased a week ago. I did not add any Stabil to this last batch of
gas. My filter with a water separator did fall from it's bracket, but I don't know if this causes water to be introduced into the gas line. If it is water,
or bad gas, do I have to drain the whole tank (pain in the butt)? Does the
carbuertator have to be stripped down, or are there any other simpler measures I can take before tearing things apart? I bought the latest gas at a reliable neighborhood station, but could it be bad enough to cause this kind of failure? Does the higher octane gas help or hurt this kind of
problem?
I cannot depend on this engine anymore for reliable power. Even with a sailboat, I cannot bring it back off the lake and maneurver it to my slip
down the Root River and through a bridge with fixed opening times. I have owned a British Seagull and a Chrysler Sailor engines, both two strokes, and never had these kinds of problems. These four strokes are
like pampered children and can be dangerous when they go out at the wrong times.
Sherwin
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