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#1
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On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 08:03:31 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: These guys are pretty good. As I previously posted, I visited them on Thursday to see how things were going. When I mentioned the control valve the tech acknowledged that it was the first thing he thought of but they are obligated to follow the recommended "fix" procedures by Nissan in order to be compensated for parts and labor by the manufacturer for warranty repair. In order to replace the control valve they have to get further authorization from Nissan. Makes sense but if they were free to do what *they* think should be done I would have had the car back on Wednesday. Now it will be sometime next week. Ok with me. The loaner they gave me is nice and better equipped. Might even see if I can strike a deal to keep it instead. :-) I ran into a similar thing with Mercury on my old 60 EFI outboard. Unfortunately they ended up selling me some parts I did not need in the flow chart (thermostat, impeller etc) but I saved the original ones and reused them on subsequent maintenance so I just ended up eating some labor. In the end I had isolated the problem down to a few things that they could not ignore and they finally admitted it was a problem mating the Mercury "big foot" L/U cooling water to the Yamaha licensed power head. They knew about it and thought they had the problem fixed ... it wasn't. My local guy came up with the fix that was adopted for all of them until subsequent new manufacture used a different interface. Essentially the water tube broke loose at the top and it was done by the dealer on the first 100 hour (in 2002). That was the last time I ever took a motor to a dealer for routine service although it was a pretty common problem on all of the "big foot" Mercs that used Yamaha power heads around that time. The local guy had just gone through this on a smaller motor but he still had to convince Merc it affected the 40-60s. By then I had the folks in corporate involved and I was beating them up pretty bad on the boat BBs. They gave him free rein to fix the problem and when he was successful they wanted to know what he did. Bottom up, field engineering ;-) |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Saturday, 3 June 2017 11:25:02 UTC-3, wrote:
On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 08:03:31 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: These guys are pretty good. As I previously posted, I visited them on Thursday to see how things were going. When I mentioned the control valve the tech acknowledged that it was the first thing he thought of but they are obligated to follow the recommended "fix" procedures by Nissan in order to be compensated for parts and labor by the manufacturer for warranty repair. In order to replace the control valve they have to get further authorization from Nissan. Makes sense but if they were free to do what *they* think should be done I would have had the car back on Wednesday. Now it will be sometime next week. Ok with me. The loaner they gave me is nice and better equipped. Might even see if I can strike a deal to keep it instead. :-) I ran into a similar thing with Mercury on my old 60 EFI outboard. Unfortunately they ended up selling me some parts I did not need in the flow chart (thermostat, impeller etc) but I saved the original ones and reused them on subsequent maintenance so I just ended up eating some labor. In the end I had isolated the problem down to a few things that they could not ignore and they finally admitted it was a problem mating the Mercury "big foot" L/U cooling water to the Yamaha licensed power head. They knew about it and thought they had the problem fixed ... it wasn't. My local guy came up with the fix that was adopted for all of them until subsequent new manufacture used a different interface. Essentially the water tube broke loose at the top and it was done by the dealer on the first 100 hour (in 2002). That was the last time I ever took a motor to a dealer for routine service although it was a pretty common problem on all of the "big foot" Mercs that used Yamaha power heads around that time. The local guy had just gone through this on a smaller motor but he still had to convince Merc it affected the 40-60s. By then I had the folks in corporate involved and I was beating them up pretty bad on the boat BBs. They gave him free rein to fix the problem and when he was successful they wanted to know what he did. Bottom up, field engineering ;-) Wow! I had no problem with my 'Made in China' 2012 Mercury 60 BigFoot. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On 6/3/17 12:41 PM, True North wrote:
On Saturday, 3 June 2017 11:25:02 UTC-3, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 08:03:31 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: These guys are pretty good. As I previously posted, I visited them on Thursday to see how things were going. When I mentioned the control valve the tech acknowledged that it was the first thing he thought of but they are obligated to follow the recommended "fix" procedures by Nissan in order to be compensated for parts and labor by the manufacturer for warranty repair. In order to replace the control valve they have to get further authorization from Nissan. Makes sense but if they were free to do what *they* think should be done I would have had the car back on Wednesday. Now it will be sometime next week. Ok with me. The loaner they gave me is nice and better equipped. Might even see if I can strike a deal to keep it instead. :-) I ran into a similar thing with Mercury on my old 60 EFI outboard. Unfortunately they ended up selling me some parts I did not need in the flow chart (thermostat, impeller etc) but I saved the original ones and reused them on subsequent maintenance so I just ended up eating some labor. In the end I had isolated the problem down to a few things that they could not ignore and they finally admitted it was a problem mating the Mercury "big foot" L/U cooling water to the Yamaha licensed power head. They knew about it and thought they had the problem fixed ... it wasn't. My local guy came up with the fix that was adopted for all of them until subsequent new manufacture used a different interface. Essentially the water tube broke loose at the top and it was done by the dealer on the first 100 hour (in 2002). That was the last time I ever took a motor to a dealer for routine service although it was a pretty common problem on all of the "big foot" Mercs that used Yamaha power heads around that time. The local guy had just gone through this on a smaller motor but he still had to convince Merc it affected the 40-60s. By then I had the folks in corporate involved and I was beating them up pretty bad on the boat BBs. They gave him free rein to fix the problem and when he was successful they wanted to know what he did. Bottom up, field engineering ;-) Wow! I had no problem with my 'Made in China' 2012 Mercury 60 BigFoot. Greg had the 1912 Evinrude, signed by Ole Evinrude himself and with 210,000 hours on it. ![]() |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 13:32:45 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote:
Greg had the 1912 Evinrude, signed by Ole Evinrude himself and with 210,000 hours on it. ![]() Funny you say that. I did have a 1924 Evinrude I got for $25 from the same little old lady who sold me the 1974 7.5 HP merc I used on my 12' jon boat for years. (both for $300). I still have the 7.5 but I gave the old 'rude to a collector here. I am sure I could have sold it for a handsome profit but this was a good guy who appreciated it. I am sure it is restored to like new condition by now. It is what he does. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On 6/3/2017 5:17 PM, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 6/3/17 4:02 PM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 13:32:45 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: Greg had the 1912 Evinrude, signed by Ole Evinrude himself and with 210,000 hours on it. ![]() Funny you say that. I did have a 1924 Evinrude I got for $25 from the same little old lady who sold me the 1974 7.5 HP merc I used on my 12' jon boat for years. (both for $300). I still have the 7.5 but I gave the old 'rude to a collector here. I am sure I could have sold it for a handsome profit but this was a good guy who appreciated it. I am sure it is restored to like new condition by now. It is what he does. My dad always had some really old Evinrudes in the shop, but I don't recall what most of them were. I do remember, though, a 50 hp monster from post WWII that he stuck on a 13' speedboat he built to race around Long Island Sound. Found a photo of one: http://tinyurl.com/y9exrwyc Don't think that's a 50 hp outboard. The spec says "3hp at 3000 RPM. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 18:16:43 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 6/3/2017 5:17 PM, Keyser Soze wrote: On 6/3/17 4:02 PM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 13:32:45 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: Greg had the 1912 Evinrude, signed by Ole Evinrude himself and with 210,000 hours on it. ![]() Funny you say that. I did have a 1924 Evinrude I got for $25 from the same little old lady who sold me the 1974 7.5 HP merc I used on my 12' jon boat for years. (both for $300). I still have the 7.5 but I gave the old 'rude to a collector here. I am sure I could have sold it for a handsome profit but this was a good guy who appreciated it. I am sure it is restored to like new condition by now. It is what he does. My dad always had some really old Evinrudes in the shop, but I don't recall what most of them were. I do remember, though, a 50 hp monster from post WWII that he stuck on a 13' speedboat he built to race around Long Island Sound. Found a photo of one: http://tinyurl.com/y9exrwyc Don't think that's a 50 hp outboard. The spec says "3hp at 3000 RPM. That is not the same one. That looks newer |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On Saturday, 3 June 2017 18:17:34 UTC-3, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 6/3/17 4:02 PM, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 13:32:45 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: Greg had the 1912 Evinrude, signed by Ole Evinrude himself and with 210,000 hours on it. ![]() Funny you say that. I did have a 1924 Evinrude I got for $25 from the same little old lady who sold me the 1974 7.5 HP merc I used on my 12' jon boat for years. (both for $300). I still have the 7.5 but I gave the old 'rude to a collector here. I am sure I could have sold it for a handsome profit but this was a good guy who appreciated it. I am sure it is restored to like new condition by now. It is what he does. My dad always had some really old Evinrudes in the shop, but I don't recall what most of them were. I do remember, though, a 50 hp monster from post WWII that he stuck on a 13' speedboat he built to race around Long Island Sound. Found a photo of one: http://tinyurl.com/y9exrwyc My "first" outboard that I got to use for the summer when I was about six was a 1-1/2 hp that I put on the back of a pram. The next summer, when I was seven, I got a slightly used Mercury Super Hurricane he took in on trade. It was a 10 hp, but in reality it might have had twice that much hp. Put it on a 12' Penn Yan. That old motor strangely looks a bit like my 1954 British Seagull 40 Plus. http://www.britishseagullparts.com/40Plus.htm |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 09:41:35 -0700 (PDT), True North
wrote: On Saturday, 3 June 2017 11:25:02 UTC-3, wrote: On Sat, 3 Jun 2017 08:03:31 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: These guys are pretty good. As I previously posted, I visited them on Thursday to see how things were going. When I mentioned the control valve the tech acknowledged that it was the first thing he thought of but they are obligated to follow the recommended "fix" procedures by Nissan in order to be compensated for parts and labor by the manufacturer for warranty repair. In order to replace the control valve they have to get further authorization from Nissan. Makes sense but if they were free to do what *they* think should be done I would have had the car back on Wednesday. Now it will be sometime next week. Ok with me. The loaner they gave me is nice and better equipped. Might even see if I can strike a deal to keep it instead. :-) I ran into a similar thing with Mercury on my old 60 EFI outboard. Unfortunately they ended up selling me some parts I did not need in the flow chart (thermostat, impeller etc) but I saved the original ones and reused them on subsequent maintenance so I just ended up eating some labor. In the end I had isolated the problem down to a few things that they could not ignore and they finally admitted it was a problem mating the Mercury "big foot" L/U cooling water to the Yamaha licensed power head. They knew about it and thought they had the problem fixed ... it wasn't. My local guy came up with the fix that was adopted for all of them until subsequent new manufacture used a different interface. Essentially the water tube broke loose at the top and it was done by the dealer on the first 100 hour (in 2002). That was the last time I ever took a motor to a dealer for routine service although it was a pretty common problem on all of the "big foot" Mercs that used Yamaha power heads around that time. The local guy had just gone through this on a smaller motor but he still had to convince Merc it affected the 40-60s. By then I had the folks in corporate involved and I was beating them up pretty bad on the boat BBs. They gave him free rein to fix the problem and when he was successful they wanted to know what he did. Bottom up, field engineering ;-) Wow! I had no problem with my 'Made in China' 2012 Mercury 60 BigFoot. I am sure after 10 years, they shook out all of the bugs. Honestly, that was the only real design defect I had in 3000 hours. Other than that I just had one bad HP fuel pump and two bad IAC valves. The pump caused the engine to start leaning out around 3000 RPM with low rail pressure on the injector rail. The IAC valve keeps it from idling, it is OK once the throttle opens a bit. On those motors, the throttle is closed on idle and the air all comes from the IAC, controlled by the computer. It is a $40 part that is real easy to change (one hose, one connector and one screw, all out in the open). That is what makes the "paca paca" sound when it is idling. The HP pump is a little harder but not much. You need to open up the vapor separator. You might be able to do it without removing the VST but I just took it off (3 screws). Easy job in the driveway. |
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