Choke additional question
Once the engine is fully warmed up, you should not need the choke. If a warmed engine won't idle without the choke, then it needs a tuneup. Standard disclaimers follow. I'm no expert - grain of salt - etc.This is how I'd do it:You can perform a tuneup while moored or tied to a dock (or underway if you've got plenty of room, and someone to steer while you're tweaking). The engine should be in gear and loaded (not under sail). If you can keep the engine running in gear w/o the choke by just adding more throttle, do so. The engine should be fully warmed up.The choke provides extra fuel to the carb, for when the engine is cold. If it won't idle w/o the choke, you need to open the fuel mixture screw to provide more fuel. Find the carb mixture screw (it's not used to attach anything - the screw shaft runs through a coil spring - it runs directly into the carb). Turn the screw counter clockwise, making very slow, small adjustments (5-10 degrees/second), and keeping track of how far you're turning the screw from the start position (in case performance gets worse - you can back up). Listen carefully. The engine should start to speed up.If the engine starts racing, back off on the throttle. If the throttle is at it's slowest setting, and the engine is still racing, you need to back off of the "idle speed screw". This is a screw near the carb, that limits the motion of the throttle linkage, controlling how slow you can set the throttle. You can find it by moving the throttle back and forth repeatedly, and watching the linkage. Reduce the throttle so that the engine idles as slow as possible w/o stalling. Continually repeat the mixture adjustment, then the throttle adjustment, until further unscrewing of the mixture screw causes the engine rpms to drop. At that point, the carb is flooding with too much fuel. Turn the screw back in, and find the position that gives you the highest rpms. If this is much above a reasonable idle speed, back off on the throttle and adjust the mixture again. As you get closer to dialing in the mixture and idle speed settings, your adjustments should get smaller and smaller. Eventually you should get to a point where the engine is at a slow but steady idle, and any mixture screw adjustment beyond a small range causes the rpms to drop, and reducing the throttle slightly more causes the engine to start stalling. Leave the mixture screw in the middle of this range. Adjust the idle speed screw limit to a little above the stall speed.All this is done in gear. Now that you're idling in gear, when you shift to neutral, the engine will speed up, but hopefully it won't be racing. Shifting at high rpms is damaging to the gears. If it is idling fast in neutral, a temporary solution is to back off the idle speed limit screw, and just try to remember that you need to give it some gas as soon as it goes into gear.