A couple questions I'm hoping someone can help out with.
25 hp 2-cylinder 2 stroke Johnson. I think its an 83' with an 84' lower unit.
I moved my gas tank to the front of the boat, and now have about a 15' long fuel line. I used 3/8" fuel hose from a local hardware store. From the fuel pump to the carb, the motor had 1/4" fuel hose, so I assumed 3/8" would be plenty for that long of a run.
I've noticed that since moving it, when I accelerate, the motor will briefly drop in RPM, then come back about a second later. The rest of the time its fine. And it only seems to do this after we've sat for a while.
Is my fuel line run too long and the pump can't suck fast enough to keep up?
I'm wondering if with this long of a run, so I need to add in a helper pump?
I just rebuilt the fuel pump with a kit at the beginning of the season.
like this one? - https://www.amazon.com/W8sunjs-Universal-Heavy-Electric-Petrol/dp/B00L8IHM9K
finally, one other question.
I'm running NGK sparkplugs that are labeled for marine use and are on the compatibility chart for the OEM plugs for the engine.
However, I read that because the NGK's have an "R" in the model number, that means they are "resistor plugs", and could damage my coil packs?
I don't want to throw away $10 worth of plugs, because I have brand new ones in there, and I have a new set in the dry box just in case. I've been running it all season on them (just replaced them after about 10 hours on the engine to see what they looked like) without issue. Is there any truth to this? Should I switch to the OEM Champions?
25 hp 2-cylinder 2 stroke Johnson. I think its an 83' with an 84' lower unit.
I moved my gas tank to the front of the boat, and now have about a 15' long fuel line. I used 3/8" fuel hose from a local hardware store. From the fuel pump to the carb, the motor had 1/4" fuel hose, so I assumed 3/8" would be plenty for that long of a run.
I've noticed that since moving it, when I accelerate, the motor will briefly drop in RPM, then come back about a second later. The rest of the time its fine. And it only seems to do this after we've sat for a while.
Is my fuel line run too long and the pump can't suck fast enough to keep up?
I'm wondering if with this long of a run, so I need to add in a helper pump?
I just rebuilt the fuel pump with a kit at the beginning of the season.
like this one? - https://www.amazon.com/W8sunjs-Universal-Heavy-Electric-Petrol/dp/B00L8IHM9K
finally, one other question.
I'm running NGK sparkplugs that are labeled for marine use and are on the compatibility chart for the OEM plugs for the engine.
However, I read that because the NGK's have an "R" in the model number, that means they are "resistor plugs", and could damage my coil packs?
I don't want to throw away $10 worth of plugs, because I have brand new ones in there, and I have a new set in the dry box just in case. I've been running it all season on them (just replaced them after about 10 hours on the engine to see what they looked like) without issue. Is there any truth to this? Should I switch to the OEM Champions?