I've been chasing an issue with my 2009 Mercury 9.9 4 Stroke since last year. Sometimes it will run perfectly, other times it will run for various lengths of time and 'run out of fuel'; die. I always disconnect the fuel and run it empty when done for the day. My non-venting Atwood fuel tank sits inside the rear compartment, and the hose runs through a bulkhead fitting and to the motor.
Last season I installed a brand new fuel tank and Atwood hose kit so everything was new to the motor. Still had problems. I originally had the fuel bulb mounted perfectly horizontal, and on the advice of this forum I re-routed it to sit at an angle (I've tried angling in both directions). This made no difference. I moved the bulb from inside the locker to the motor well so I could pump it to keep the motor running when it started to die. I drained the fuel with ethanol out of the tank, checked the tube and 'check ball' in the tank, and refilled with brand new ethanol free gas.
I found the lining inside the gray Atwood hose was separating from the hose, so I thought this was restricting fuel supply. I replaced all the fuel line with fuel injection line. I replaced the bulb. I replaced the bulkhead fitting.
A couple of weeks ago it was having issues immediately, and I traced it to an air leak at the fuel hose fitting at the engine. Bingo, right! I replaced the fitting last week and the motor ran perfectly during our outing; even during a storm while we motored back in under load. We went out yesterday, motored for about 25 minutes as there was no wind...then it died suddenly. Pumped the bulb, restarted, and had to 'nurse' it the rest of the day by periodically pumping the bulb.
Checked the fuel level and it is down to about 2.5 gallons (6 gallon tank). My only thought at this point is that the tank sits below the motor fuel inlet, and with lower fuel levels it does not maintain flow, but I don't know.
Below are pics of my installation. I'm open to any/all suggestions. These motor issues are impacting the wife's confidence. She didn't want to sail yesterday when the wind picked up because we couldn't count on the motor (my slip cannot be sailed into). Please help!
Last season I installed a brand new fuel tank and Atwood hose kit so everything was new to the motor. Still had problems. I originally had the fuel bulb mounted perfectly horizontal, and on the advice of this forum I re-routed it to sit at an angle (I've tried angling in both directions). This made no difference. I moved the bulb from inside the locker to the motor well so I could pump it to keep the motor running when it started to die. I drained the fuel with ethanol out of the tank, checked the tube and 'check ball' in the tank, and refilled with brand new ethanol free gas.
I found the lining inside the gray Atwood hose was separating from the hose, so I thought this was restricting fuel supply. I replaced all the fuel line with fuel injection line. I replaced the bulb. I replaced the bulkhead fitting.
A couple of weeks ago it was having issues immediately, and I traced it to an air leak at the fuel hose fitting at the engine. Bingo, right! I replaced the fitting last week and the motor ran perfectly during our outing; even during a storm while we motored back in under load. We went out yesterday, motored for about 25 minutes as there was no wind...then it died suddenly. Pumped the bulb, restarted, and had to 'nurse' it the rest of the day by periodically pumping the bulb.
Checked the fuel level and it is down to about 2.5 gallons (6 gallon tank). My only thought at this point is that the tank sits below the motor fuel inlet, and with lower fuel levels it does not maintain flow, but I don't know.
Below are pics of my installation. I'm open to any/all suggestions. These motor issues are impacting the wife's confidence. She didn't want to sail yesterday when the wind picked up because we couldn't count on the motor (my slip cannot be sailed into). Please help!

