I have a pair of 2006 F150s mounted on a 25' Pursuit. Factory installation, no mods. Boat sees little use, has low hours and is in mint condition, as are the motors. Stored covered on a trailer. I've owned it since new and have never experienced this problem before.
Today on a seatrial the starboard engine was intermittently ventilating (or cavitating) wildly when running at speeds of 3,000 RPM plus. (If the port engine was running 3500 RPM the starboard engine would suddenly accelerate to 4300 +, but with no difference in boat speed). This happened in conditions I would not ordinarily expect this to occur. Straight course, no turns, flat seas. It seemed to be only the starboard engine and it seemed a little more prone to this when trimmed up a bit, but it also did it when not trimmed. Backing off the throttle cured the problem, but then it would happen again. 3 or 4 times in a 25 minute run at moderate planning speeds.
The only unusual factor is that the boat has been laid up in storage for 18 months, but it was properly stored and the engines seem to otherwise run fine.
Any ideas?
Today on a seatrial the starboard engine was intermittently ventilating (or cavitating) wildly when running at speeds of 3,000 RPM plus. (If the port engine was running 3500 RPM the starboard engine would suddenly accelerate to 4300 +, but with no difference in boat speed). This happened in conditions I would not ordinarily expect this to occur. Straight course, no turns, flat seas. It seemed to be only the starboard engine and it seemed a little more prone to this when trimmed up a bit, but it also did it when not trimmed. Backing off the throttle cured the problem, but then it would happen again. 3 or 4 times in a 25 minute run at moderate planning speeds.
The only unusual factor is that the boat has been laid up in storage for 18 months, but it was properly stored and the engines seem to otherwise run fine.
Any ideas?
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