RyanB72
New Member
Hi All, I am having some continued issues with my 2000 GTI ski not running right.
To give you some background, a friend rebuilt the carb and fixed the issue with the fuel sending unit. In the process of this he got a few fuel lines mixed up and an odd problem here and there with the carb. I've pulled the carb apart and fixed the fuel line problems (ON and RETURN were switched). Verified both Jet's are clear of obstructions, I've blown all passages out with air and carb cleaner. Verified that the 3 tiny holes are all clear going from the low speed circuit to the throttle body. Verified that the arm for the needle is flush like the manual states it should be. Carb was put back together, high speed screw all the way in, low speed screw was 1 1/2 turn out.
I went through the shop manual and performed most of the tests for the carb. My pop off pressure is near 40psi. I say near as I am using a pressure regulator on my air tank. It's close. Using stock silver spring. The fuel pump hold pressure and vacuum where it needs to. I've cranked the engine and held my finger over the return outlet and verified it has fuel pressure.
OK, on to the problem. The ski starts up without issues. Idles just fine in and out of the water when you start it. Out of the water it rev's very well. When I get it in the water and get past 1/4 throttle it just doesn't do anything. RPM's stay about the same. Then when I get to 3/4 throttle it takes off. If I back off the throttle it wants to die and many times it does if I try to let is idle after coming off full acceleration. After about 5-10 minutes though it loses power even at full throttle.
The high speed screw was all the way in. I noticed the plugs seem to look like it's running lean. I turned the high speed screw out a half turn. Made no difference at high speed. Plugs still look lean.
So after about an hour of messing with it on the water I pulled it out and came home. I am hoping I can get some second of direction what to do before taking it back out to the water.
Thanks any one for any assistance you can provide.
~Ryan
To give you some background, a friend rebuilt the carb and fixed the issue with the fuel sending unit. In the process of this he got a few fuel lines mixed up and an odd problem here and there with the carb. I've pulled the carb apart and fixed the fuel line problems (ON and RETURN were switched). Verified both Jet's are clear of obstructions, I've blown all passages out with air and carb cleaner. Verified that the 3 tiny holes are all clear going from the low speed circuit to the throttle body. Verified that the arm for the needle is flush like the manual states it should be. Carb was put back together, high speed screw all the way in, low speed screw was 1 1/2 turn out.
I went through the shop manual and performed most of the tests for the carb. My pop off pressure is near 40psi. I say near as I am using a pressure regulator on my air tank. It's close. Using stock silver spring. The fuel pump hold pressure and vacuum where it needs to. I've cranked the engine and held my finger over the return outlet and verified it has fuel pressure.
OK, on to the problem. The ski starts up without issues. Idles just fine in and out of the water when you start it. Out of the water it rev's very well. When I get it in the water and get past 1/4 throttle it just doesn't do anything. RPM's stay about the same. Then when I get to 3/4 throttle it takes off. If I back off the throttle it wants to die and many times it does if I try to let is idle after coming off full acceleration. After about 5-10 minutes though it loses power even at full throttle.
The high speed screw was all the way in. I noticed the plugs seem to look like it's running lean. I turned the high speed screw out a half turn. Made no difference at high speed. Plugs still look lean.
So after about an hour of messing with it on the water I pulled it out and came home. I am hoping I can get some second of direction what to do before taking it back out to the water.
Thanks any one for any assistance you can provide.
~Ryan