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Both. I could show you a dozen fresh water impellers that are cracked and
beaten. -W "Sunny" wrote in message news:1wjfd.8916 Luck, or fresh water? |
Sorry for starting a mini flame war, but I do appreciate all the
advice. Based on all the input I believe I will proceed as follows: 1. Visual inspection of hoses, wires, etc., make any repairs necessary and replace the lower unit lube. 2. Squirt some 2-stroke oil in the cylinders and pull the starter cord a few times (hopefully it will pull - if not I'll have a pretty good idea of what I've got on my hands). 3. Mix a small quantity of fuel/oil with a slightly richer portion of oil than usual (spec. is 50:1, maybe go 30 or 40:1). 4. Try and fire it up and run it for awhile in a barrel of water and see how it goes. 5. If it seems OK, probably take it to a shop for a check/tune up. 6. When I begin using it on the water again, bring along a kicker just in case. Again, thanks for the input. |
Clams Canino wrote: "Sunny" wrote in message news:YTifd.5808 If the options were that cut'n'dried, I'd replace the impeller too... but why stop there? Ignition failure due to rotted insulation is at least as likely to leave one stranded. Stop trying to semantic your way out of this, you are a poor debator. An ignition stranding can be easily fixed, a powerhead failure is a "catastrophic failure" type stranding. Just because you had good luck with 100 inpellers and the one you had to change was a bitch and 1/2, does not make you right - it makes you biased. Your position is wrong, but it's yours based on personal experience. The *collective* experience dictates the right answer. I agree, I just wasn't aware that you speak for the collective. Sunny |
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