Hey guys,
Scenario:
2002 Yamaha F225 4 stroke with 900 hours - has had every scheduled maintenance and just had a full service @ 800 hours this past winter replacing all fuel filters, water/fuel seperator, spark plugs and rebuilt the water pump.
Issue: Motor has been working excellent, rarely it would not crank on the first try recently, but always fired up perfect on the 2nd try. This past Sunday while running home from the Islands, the motor cut out like it was losing fuel slowly and will not re-start. It'll crank non-stop and sounds good, but seems to not be getting fuel to actually fire up.
So far I have checked the 10micron fuel filter and water/fuel seperator and also the "common" 3-pin connector issue with no luck. I do hear the fuel pumps turn on when the key is turned to "on position".
Is the fuel pump I hear with the key in the "on" position the VST or low pressure feed pump?
Can a clogged VST filter, "F" filter, or such be the cause?
Any suggestions of where to look first? Should I be able to hear the high pressure VST pump turn on?
Any ideas or tips would be great, I'm going to take a serious look this weekend and put in some time.
Scenario:
2002 Yamaha F225 4 stroke with 900 hours - has had every scheduled maintenance and just had a full service @ 800 hours this past winter replacing all fuel filters, water/fuel seperator, spark plugs and rebuilt the water pump.
Issue: Motor has been working excellent, rarely it would not crank on the first try recently, but always fired up perfect on the 2nd try. This past Sunday while running home from the Islands, the motor cut out like it was losing fuel slowly and will not re-start. It'll crank non-stop and sounds good, but seems to not be getting fuel to actually fire up.
So far I have checked the 10micron fuel filter and water/fuel seperator and also the "common" 3-pin connector issue with no luck. I do hear the fuel pumps turn on when the key is turned to "on position".
Is the fuel pump I hear with the key in the "on" position the VST or low pressure feed pump?
Can a clogged VST filter, "F" filter, or such be the cause?
Any suggestions of where to look first? Should I be able to hear the high pressure VST pump turn on?
Any ideas or tips would be great, I'm going to take a serious look this weekend and put in some time.
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