Two days ago, I ran the engine (Yanmar 2GM20F) on dry land to test it before today's launch date. I mean: I ran the heck out of it. Usually, I just do one bucket of water-worth, but this time, I had a garden hose going into the bucket, so I did maybe 3 buckets worth (say 3-4 minutes). It started a tiny bit hard (as usual after sitting), but started right up and ran flawlessly, as it has for 18 years.
This morning, I was picked up by the Travelift, and put in the water. Checked below, adjusted the stuffing box, and tried to start it. It would always catch for a few seconds and then die. After many attempts, they handed me around to a nearby slip (not my own). I hung my head in shame...
My first thought was: what changed since it ran 2 days ago? The boat was vibrated and moved, so maybe sediment stirred up in the tank and clogged the fuel filter. I went and bought a new filter. Changed it out: the fuel drained from the bowl looked almost perfect. Just a few specks of black, and no water. Tried to start it again: same behavior. Tried bleeding at the secondary (the one on the engine, I think?). I believe I did see a few seconds worth of foam, and then steady fuel. Wouldn't start. Did this 3-4 times with the same result. Tried bleeding at the bolt on the engine after the secondary: I think fuel was coming out fine. No start.
Went back to the primary, which is a Racor 120RMAM with a R12T screwed into it. There's a little puddle under it, which maybe I didn't clean up when I changed the filter? Wait: there's fuel on top of the filter around the "head bolt" which screws into the filter:
I wiped this down (I think I did last time, but...) and it keeps seeping out. Did it a few times: still seeping. You can see the red in the photo. So at this point, I'm thinking: if fuel is getting out, air is getting in. Here's the head bolt:
So it's got a couple of o-rings and a metal washer, none of which are spec'd by Racor separately. I ordered a kit that I think (?) will contain these, but not from Racor.
I really hate these things where more than one thing may be going wrong at the same time. If this air leak is the problem, then why did it magically occur between my running on land and when I launched today? And now that I'm no longer at the boat, maybe I didn't screw this bolt down far enough? (Actually, I did torque it down pretty good.) Putting on the filter/bowl combo is come combination of spinning it onto the bolt (which protrudes through the top piece), and then finally tightening down the bolt to snug the filter up to the top piece. Maybe I should have just done this all over again from scratch, but at that time I was getting tired.
Anyway: I've read for years and years about gunk in the tank clogging filters, and about air leaks and bleeding. But to be honest: my 2GM20F has just run flawlessly for 18 years. I'm not even sure I've ever bled the fuel lines before! I just fill the filter and bowl up to the top when I change the primary, and screw it on. It always starts right up. Never had a problem. So that leaves me without much in the way of coping skills now. I tried to bleed the dang thing many times today before discovering the leak on the top of the primary, so I'm hoping that's the problem. Any and all advice is welcome! Thanks.
This morning, I was picked up by the Travelift, and put in the water. Checked below, adjusted the stuffing box, and tried to start it. It would always catch for a few seconds and then die. After many attempts, they handed me around to a nearby slip (not my own). I hung my head in shame...
My first thought was: what changed since it ran 2 days ago? The boat was vibrated and moved, so maybe sediment stirred up in the tank and clogged the fuel filter. I went and bought a new filter. Changed it out: the fuel drained from the bowl looked almost perfect. Just a few specks of black, and no water. Tried to start it again: same behavior. Tried bleeding at the secondary (the one on the engine, I think?). I believe I did see a few seconds worth of foam, and then steady fuel. Wouldn't start. Did this 3-4 times with the same result. Tried bleeding at the bolt on the engine after the secondary: I think fuel was coming out fine. No start.
Went back to the primary, which is a Racor 120RMAM with a R12T screwed into it. There's a little puddle under it, which maybe I didn't clean up when I changed the filter? Wait: there's fuel on top of the filter around the "head bolt" which screws into the filter:
I wiped this down (I think I did last time, but...) and it keeps seeping out. Did it a few times: still seeping. You can see the red in the photo. So at this point, I'm thinking: if fuel is getting out, air is getting in. Here's the head bolt:
So it's got a couple of o-rings and a metal washer, none of which are spec'd by Racor separately. I ordered a kit that I think (?) will contain these, but not from Racor.
I really hate these things where more than one thing may be going wrong at the same time. If this air leak is the problem, then why did it magically occur between my running on land and when I launched today? And now that I'm no longer at the boat, maybe I didn't screw this bolt down far enough? (Actually, I did torque it down pretty good.) Putting on the filter/bowl combo is come combination of spinning it onto the bolt (which protrudes through the top piece), and then finally tightening down the bolt to snug the filter up to the top piece. Maybe I should have just done this all over again from scratch, but at that time I was getting tired.
Anyway: I've read for years and years about gunk in the tank clogging filters, and about air leaks and bleeding. But to be honest: my 2GM20F has just run flawlessly for 18 years. I'm not even sure I've ever bled the fuel lines before! I just fill the filter and bowl up to the top when I change the primary, and screw it on. It always starts right up. Never had a problem. So that leaves me without much in the way of coping skills now. I tried to bleed the dang thing many times today before discovering the leak on the top of the primary, so I'm hoping that's the problem. Any and all advice is welcome! Thanks.