I did an earlier post re asking you guys on how to syphon fuel out of my tank, reason being as my engine was barely running as water had gotten into the fuel. I bit the bullet and took it to Karee Marine at Rocklea. Along with my annual service, I asked the mechanic to fix my donk (obviously). It is a 2002 90hp Yammie 2 stroke on a 5.2 AMM Plate Centre Console.
They told me that the built in 120 litre fuel tank had a LOT of water in it. They said most likely from a bad batch of fuel at a servo. They cleaned out all three carbies and said that each carbie was clogged with about 2 teaspoons of white jelly substance each. They said they drained the tank, separated the fuel, then replaced the fuel. They returned it to me with the instructions of using a water separating funnel when I fill my tank and I put in a bottle of I think it was quicksilver dri-fuel to hopefully get rid of any residual water.
I took the boat for a couple of short runs. It was a little lumpy when idling and coughed every 30 seconds or so, but when I opened the throttle it ran well.
Problem is after about 1 1/2 hours of running, the revs dropped and it cut out. I went down to the fuel filter (water separator) and saw there was a heap of murky water in it. I drained this out and more came in.
Basically it fair stuffed up my fishing holiday in Hervey Bay
I am returning it to be looked at next week, but I want to know how this water is getting inI am keeping the tank full to lessen condensation. The boat is kept covered. I am using a fuel filter and water separating funnel. Can water get in by any other means? Like can it get in through the water pump in the engine and there be some sort of leak from this?
Can water get into the fuel lines or into the tank by some means that may be the fault of the boat manufacturer?
I know I'm doing the right things, but I'm starting to not trust the engine anymore, which is a sad thing.![]()