I posted a message two to three days ago about my outboard (T8) that I could not start. Because I cannot find a way to remove the carburetor from the outboard, I have to clean the carburetor in place. The complication is that the instructoin of SeaFoam (that I plan to use) only describes the way to use it with the engine still can run. Mine could not start. I tried to find out the way to flush the carburetor in that situation. The message was still in this forum in this morning. But by this evening, the message has disappeared.
I am posting this again because I have found the exact steps to flush the carburetor in my outboard (T8) that could not be started in the normal way:
1. I got a can of starting-fluid and a can of SeaFoam Spray.
2. I removed the air intake duct. I found that I couldn't use SeaFoam properly with the air duct in place. It has to be removed.
3. I opened the air intake valve (using the choke lever) of the carburetor, and sprayed some starting-fluid into the carburetor.
4. I closed the air intake valve (full choke), and started the motor.
5. The motor started with the starting fluid. The motor smoked quite a bit with the starting fluid. But it would soon stop when it burns out the small amount of starting fluid. I opened the air intake valve before it burned out the starting fluid. I sprayed more starting fluid into the carburetor to keep the motor running. And I kept spraying starting fluid whenever the motor showed sign of running out of starting fluid (it made different sound). After a short while, I got used to this cycle.
6. At that point, I introduced SeaFoam. When the outboard started showing sign of burning out of starting fluid, I sprayed SeaForm into the carburetor instead of starting fluid. The SeaFoam acted like the starting fluid to keep the motor running. The SeaFoam smoked quite a bit just like the starting fluid. I kept doing this for a while. In my case, I don't know if this step really helped or not; the reason is that the motor stopped if I stopped spraying SeaFoam. But this step was exactly the step that I took; therefore, I need to mention this.
7. I soaked the carburetor with SeaFoam (I guess this is called "Hot Soak"), and let it sat for 5 minutes or so.
6. I started the motor without the use of any starting fluid. There was plenty of SeaFoam in the carburetor as fuel. In the beginning, the motor smoked quite a bit (as expected). I was expecting the motor to stop at any time. But it didn't stop. It kept going. After a while, the smoke reduced significantly; I believe at this point the carburetor was flushed, and it was getting regular gasoline from fuel line instead of using SeaFoam as fuel. I let it running for another 10 minutes or so just to be in the safe side.
7. At this point, I believe the outboard is ready to use. But I think I will need to run a gallon of gasoline that has been treated with SeaForm into the motor just to be in the safe side, and I need to do this soon. After all, my mechanic had flushed the outboard before, and the problem came back after the motor sat for one month. Therefore, flushing it once doesn't seem to be enough. I believe I definitely need to run a gallon of treated SeaForm through the outboard.
Please note that the steps above were exactly what I did. Some steps might not be necessary. But I have no idea which steps are needed and which steps are not.
Hope this helps someone anyway.
If there are other alternatives to SeaFoam, please let me know.
Jay
I am posting this again because I have found the exact steps to flush the carburetor in my outboard (T8) that could not be started in the normal way:
1. I got a can of starting-fluid and a can of SeaFoam Spray.
2. I removed the air intake duct. I found that I couldn't use SeaFoam properly with the air duct in place. It has to be removed.
3. I opened the air intake valve (using the choke lever) of the carburetor, and sprayed some starting-fluid into the carburetor.
4. I closed the air intake valve (full choke), and started the motor.
5. The motor started with the starting fluid. The motor smoked quite a bit with the starting fluid. But it would soon stop when it burns out the small amount of starting fluid. I opened the air intake valve before it burned out the starting fluid. I sprayed more starting fluid into the carburetor to keep the motor running. And I kept spraying starting fluid whenever the motor showed sign of running out of starting fluid (it made different sound). After a short while, I got used to this cycle.
6. At that point, I introduced SeaFoam. When the outboard started showing sign of burning out of starting fluid, I sprayed SeaForm into the carburetor instead of starting fluid. The SeaFoam acted like the starting fluid to keep the motor running. The SeaFoam smoked quite a bit just like the starting fluid. I kept doing this for a while. In my case, I don't know if this step really helped or not; the reason is that the motor stopped if I stopped spraying SeaFoam. But this step was exactly the step that I took; therefore, I need to mention this.
7. I soaked the carburetor with SeaFoam (I guess this is called "Hot Soak"), and let it sat for 5 minutes or so.
6. I started the motor without the use of any starting fluid. There was plenty of SeaFoam in the carburetor as fuel. In the beginning, the motor smoked quite a bit (as expected). I was expecting the motor to stop at any time. But it didn't stop. It kept going. After a while, the smoke reduced significantly; I believe at this point the carburetor was flushed, and it was getting regular gasoline from fuel line instead of using SeaFoam as fuel. I let it running for another 10 minutes or so just to be in the safe side.
7. At this point, I believe the outboard is ready to use. But I think I will need to run a gallon of gasoline that has been treated with SeaForm into the motor just to be in the safe side, and I need to do this soon. After all, my mechanic had flushed the outboard before, and the problem came back after the motor sat for one month. Therefore, flushing it once doesn't seem to be enough. I believe I definitely need to run a gallon of treated SeaForm through the outboard.
Please note that the steps above were exactly what I did. Some steps might not be necessary. But I have no idea which steps are needed and which steps are not.
Hope this helps someone anyway.
If there are other alternatives to SeaFoam, please let me know.
Jay
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