Went out to the lake today for the first time this season and for the first time ever my GTX has a problem. We bought it new in 97 and as of today it has about 91hrs on it and we've never had a single problem with it.
The problem... It ran perfectly for the first hour or so of riding then we stopped for a lunch break. After lunch it started right up and we putted through a no wake zone. At the end of the no wake zone I hit the gas and it went to about 5000rpm and stalled like it was out of gas. I backed off and tried again with the same result. It never did die and at idle it seems fine. It just simply will not go above 5000 rpm (4850 to be exact). From take off it seems fine as well... no delay, etc. until it hits the magic number. I should also mention it runs perfectly out of the water.
I just did the before season checks/service a couple of weeks ago... plugs, jet pump oil, etc, etc.
I've read through some of the related posts and the only thing I'm sure about is the RAVE valves are clean (and new bellows, gaskets etc as of last year).
My intent is to try the basics myself but if it gets too involved (needing special tools, etc) it'll be heading to a shop.
So, what are some of the basic steps a do-it-your-selfer could try?
Thanks!
Scott
The problem... It ran perfectly for the first hour or so of riding then we stopped for a lunch break. After lunch it started right up and we putted through a no wake zone. At the end of the no wake zone I hit the gas and it went to about 5000rpm and stalled like it was out of gas. I backed off and tried again with the same result. It never did die and at idle it seems fine. It just simply will not go above 5000 rpm (4850 to be exact). From take off it seems fine as well... no delay, etc. until it hits the magic number. I should also mention it runs perfectly out of the water.
I just did the before season checks/service a couple of weeks ago... plugs, jet pump oil, etc, etc.
I've read through some of the related posts and the only thing I'm sure about is the RAVE valves are clean (and new bellows, gaskets etc as of last year).
My intent is to try the basics myself but if it gets too involved (needing special tools, etc) it'll be heading to a shop.
So, what are some of the basic steps a do-it-your-selfer could try?
Thanks!
Scott