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Yamaha 250 problem
We bought our boat new in early 2009, a tri-toon with a Yamaha 250 four stroke. That July, we were running down the lake one day and it starting slowing, sputtered and died. After a tow and a couple days at the dealer, it had a new low pressure fuel pump along with a check valve and filter replaced under the hood, all under warranty of course. They blamed it on the fact it had sat for a while at the dealer and the fuel system had gotten a bit gummed up from not being used.
Fast forward to last week. Same symptom, back at dealer, same problem. Only this time the motor has 406 hours on it (we use the boat), I fill at the marina with non-ethanol gas, and I use a maintenance dose of marine Stabil on every fill. The service guy calls me this morning and tells me the diagnosis, and says he’s already talked to the Yamaha rep about some goodwill coverage for the pump. Says the Yamaha rep can’t do anything because it’s over a year out of warranty. Two $700 pumps in 4 years? Seems excessive to me, especially for a motor that gets used. Normally, according to the rep and the service guy, the folks that have issues are the ones that use them 15-20 hours a year. He’s going back to the rep to press the issue. Just thought I’d interject some boat content here. Wish me luck! |
Yamaha 250 problem
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Yamaha 250 problem
On Wednesday, 11 September 2013 11:36:40 UTC-3, wrote:
We bought our boat new in early 2009, a tri-toon with a Yamaha 250 four stroke. That July, we were running down the lake one day and it starting slowing, sputtered and died. After a tow and a couple days at the dealer, it had a new low pressure fuel pump along with a check valve and filter replaced under the hood, all under warranty of course. They blamed it on the fact it had sat for a while at the dealer and the fuel system had gotten a bit gummed up from not being used. Fast forward to last week. Same symptom, back at dealer, same problem. Only this time the motor has 406 hours on it (we use the boat), I fill at the marina with non-ethanol gas, and I use a maintenance dose of marine Stabil on every fill. The service guy calls me this morning and tells me the diagnosis, and says he’s already talked to the Yamaha rep about some goodwill coverage for the pump. Says the Yamaha rep can’t do anything because it’s over a year out of warranty. Two $700 pumps in 4 years? Seems excessive to me, especially for a motor that gets used. Normally, according to the rep and the service guy, the folks that have issues are the ones that use them 15-20 hours a year. He’s going back to the rep to press the issue. Just thought I’d interject some boat content here. Wish me luck! When I bought my new Legend 16 Xcalibur last year I asked if I could get a Yamaha instead of the supplied Mercury outboard. Dealer said it would be very expensive so I just bumped up to the 60 Big Foot over the small basic 40 hp. Now the mechanics at that dealer and another here in town claim that my 'Made in China' Mercury is a good reliable motor. Sure hope that's true, as I'm one of those 25 hour a year guys due to cool damp and windy conditions that seem to dominate our short 4-5 month season. |
Yamaha 250 problem
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Yamaha 250 problem
On Wednesday, September 11, 2013 11:49:30 AM UTC-4, wrote:
On Wed, 11 Sep 2013 07:36:40 -0700 (PDT), wrote: We bought our boat new in early 2009, a tri-toon with a Yamaha 250 four stroke. That July, we were running down the lake one day and it starting slowing, sputtered and died. After a tow and a couple days at the dealer, it had a new low pressure fuel pump along with a check valve and filter replaced under the hood, all under warranty of course. They blamed it on the fact it had sat for a while at the dealer and the fuel system had gotten a bit gummed up from not being used. Fast forward to last week. Same symptom, back at dealer, same problem. Only this time the motor has 406 hours on it (we use the boat), I fill at the marina with non-ethanol gas, and I use a maintenance dose of marine Stabil on every fill. The service guy calls me this morning and tells me the diagnosis, and says he’s already talked to the Yamaha rep about some goodwill coverage for the pump. Says the Yamaha rep can’t do anything because it’s over a year out of warranty. Two $700 pumps in 4 years? Seems excessive to me, especially for a motor that gets used. Normally, according to the rep and the service guy, the folks that have issues are the ones that use them 15-20 hours a year. He’s going back to the rep to press the issue. Just thought I’d interject some boat content here. Wish me luck I would take the pump apart and see what is wrong with it. Good idea. I do think Yamaha has been having LP pump problems from what I read on the real boat board Yeah, I've been doing some reading, and I see it reported quite a bit. On the other hand, Yamaha has the lion's share of the outboard market so they would have the largest number of reported issues overall, even if they are equal in quality. |
Yamaha 250 problem
I have the 5 years warranty on my Mercury with just under 4 years remaining. If you still have that pump in the summer of 2017 I might be interested. ;-) |
Yamaha 250 problem
On Wednesday, September 11, 2013 11:15:48 AM UTC-4, True North wrote:
When I bought my new Legend 16 Xcalibur last year I asked if I could get a Yamaha instead of the supplied Mercury outboard. NO ONE....cares about your Bass Boat, asswipe...... |
Yamaha 250 problem
On 9/11/2013 11:15 AM, True North wrote:
On Wednesday, 11 September 2013 11:36:40 UTC-3, wrote: We bought our boat new in early 2009, a tri-toon with a Yamaha 250 four stroke. That July, we were running down the lake one day and it starting slowing, sputtered and died. After a tow and a couple days at the dealer, it had a new low pressure fuel pump along with a check valve and filter replaced under the hood, all under warranty of course. They blamed it on the fact it had sat for a while at the dealer and the fuel system had gotten a bit gummed up from not being used. Fast forward to last week. Same symptom, back at dealer, same problem. Only this time the motor has 406 hours on it (we use the boat), I fill at the marina with non-ethanol gas, and I use a maintenance dose of marine Stabil on every fill. The service guy calls me this morning and tells me the diagnosis, and says he’s already talked to the Yamaha rep about some goodwill coverage for the pump. Says the Yamaha rep can’t do anything because it’s over a year out of warranty. Two $700 pumps in 4 years? Seems excessive to me, especially for a motor that gets used. Normally, according to the rep and the service guy, the folks that have issues are the ones that use them 15-20 hours a year. He’s going back to the rep to press the issue. Just thought I’d interject some boat content here. Wish me luck! When I bought my new Legend 16 Xcalibur last year I asked if I could get a Yamaha instead of the supplied Mercury outboard. Dealer said it would be very expensive so I just bumped up to the 60 Big Foot over the small basic 40 hp. Now the mechanics at that dealer and another here in town claim that my 'Made in China' Mercury is a good reliable motor. Sure hope that's true, as I'm one of those 25 hour a year guys due to cool damp and windy conditions that seem to dominate our short 4-5 month season. Maybe you need an 18 footer in order to tame the elements. |
Yamaha 250 problem
18 footer??
That was all the wife was talking about this summer. I'd probably lose 6 or 7 grand if I traded up so soon. |
Yamaha 250 problem
On 9/11/2013 5:54 PM, True North wrote:
18 footer?? That was all the wife was talking about this summer. I'd probably lose 6 or 7 grand if I traded up so soon. Maybe you should listen to your wife. She knows your limitations better than anyone else. |
Yamaha 250 problem
True North wrote:
18 footer?? That was all the wife was talking about this summer. I'd probably lose 6 or 7 grand if I traded up so soon. For a 25 hour a year boater, you would be much better off to rent when you want to go boating. Just the interest at 3% on a $20k boat would probably pay the way. |
Yamaha 250 problem
On Wednesday, September 11, 2013 7:16:33 PM UTC-4, Hank© wrote:
Maybe you should listen to your wife. She knows your limitations better than anyone else. The stupid **** cant back up a 16 footer..... |
Yamaha 250 problem
On Wednesday, September 11, 2013 9:04:53 PM UTC-4, Califbill wrote:
For a 25 hour a year boater, you would be much better off to rent when you want to go boating. Just the interest at 3% on a $20k boat would probably pay the way. Cockhole thinks he's impressed everyone by buying a ****ing Bass Boat that he cant even handle..... Only good for inland "puddles " |
Yamaha 250 problem
On Wednesday, September 11, 2013 10:36:40 AM UTC-4, wrote:
We bought our boat new in early 2009, a tri-toon with a Yamaha 250 four stroke. That July, we were running down the lake one day and it starting slowing, sputtered and died. After a tow and a couple days at the dealer, it had a new low pressure fuel pump along with a check valve and filter replaced under the hood, all under warranty of course. They blamed it on the fact it had sat for a while at the dealer and the fuel system had gotten a bit gummed up from not being used. Fast forward to last week. Same symptom, back at dealer, same problem. Only this time the motor has 406 hours on it (we use the boat), I fill at the marina with non-ethanol gas, and I use a maintenance dose of marine Stabil on every fill. The service guy calls me this morning and tells me the diagnosis, and says he’s already talked to the Yamaha rep about some goodwill coverage for the pump. Says the Yamaha rep can’t do anything because it’s over a year out of warranty. Two $700 pumps in 4 years? Seems excessive to me, especially for a motor that gets used. Normally, according to the rep and the service guy, the folks that have issues are the ones that use them 15-20 hours a year. He’s going back to the rep to press the issue. Just thought I’d interject some boat content here. Wish me luck! Final outcome... Yamaha didn't help. Rep reportedly said, "He got 400 hours out of that one, and it's too far out of warranty". $540 for the pump, $40 for an internal filter, and $200 in labor. Next is a carefully worded letter to Yamaha pleading my case. On the positive side, it's running great now. Spent about 5 hours on the water yesterday, and have some friends coming over this morning for brunch then an afternoon on the lake. Oh well, you want to play, you gotta pay! |
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