Arriva2001
Member
Hi,
I had my carb cleaned last year (by a reputable sea-doo independent shop/mechanic), and I added an aftermarket inline fuel filter ( a plastic one intended for a high horsepower outboard motor) before my carburetor after having replaced all of the grey fuel lines and fuel selector (this was done by me over the winter). I read a lot of comments on this forum about adding the additional inline fuel filter to prevent future fuel delivery problems if it is replaced often.
Anyway....after I replaced the tempo gray lines, I checked everywhere for leaks to ensure that all of my worm clamps were tight and that all fuel lines were not leaking any fuel. I took it out last weekend for the maiden voyage, and it ran just great for the most part. Started and accelerated fine. Ran great for a good two hours. Toward the end of my day, the engine was doing a little bit of "surge and reduce power," "Surge and reduce power," "Surge and reduce power," repeat, etc. etc. I'm not really sure how to describe this very well...but when I applied throttle to around 1/2-3/4 speed, it was kind of up and down, up and down.
Anyway, I knew this is not a good thing...so didn't want to drive it anymore and get stranded...I went low speed back to the dock and went home. Today I opened up the seat to see if I could see anything going on in there....and the fuel smell is just so strong. Very gasoline fumey. I checked all of the lines I replaced and the clamps, and didn't notice any problems/leaks. However...the inline plastic fuel filter I installed seems to have a small amount of fuel on it. I"m wondering...is it possible that the vacuum from the fuel pump could have caused the fuel filter to 'implode' or at least crack under pressure? Or maybe i caused a hairline crack by tightening the clamps on it too tight? Or maybe it just is a crappy filter?
Anyway...is an air leak in the fuel system consistent with the symptoms I described? I'm replacing that fuel filter with an automotive metal one for now until I can get another length of the ANSI approved fuel line I can install without a filter.
I'm just unsure if the engine surge problem is related...or if it caused the leak...or if this is all random. Anyway...any help would be much appreciated! I can't find a lot of info about the 587 engine online.
I had my carb cleaned last year (by a reputable sea-doo independent shop/mechanic), and I added an aftermarket inline fuel filter ( a plastic one intended for a high horsepower outboard motor) before my carburetor after having replaced all of the grey fuel lines and fuel selector (this was done by me over the winter). I read a lot of comments on this forum about adding the additional inline fuel filter to prevent future fuel delivery problems if it is replaced often.
Anyway....after I replaced the tempo gray lines, I checked everywhere for leaks to ensure that all of my worm clamps were tight and that all fuel lines were not leaking any fuel. I took it out last weekend for the maiden voyage, and it ran just great for the most part. Started and accelerated fine. Ran great for a good two hours. Toward the end of my day, the engine was doing a little bit of "surge and reduce power," "Surge and reduce power," "Surge and reduce power," repeat, etc. etc. I'm not really sure how to describe this very well...but when I applied throttle to around 1/2-3/4 speed, it was kind of up and down, up and down.
Anyway, I knew this is not a good thing...so didn't want to drive it anymore and get stranded...I went low speed back to the dock and went home. Today I opened up the seat to see if I could see anything going on in there....and the fuel smell is just so strong. Very gasoline fumey. I checked all of the lines I replaced and the clamps, and didn't notice any problems/leaks. However...the inline plastic fuel filter I installed seems to have a small amount of fuel on it. I"m wondering...is it possible that the vacuum from the fuel pump could have caused the fuel filter to 'implode' or at least crack under pressure? Or maybe i caused a hairline crack by tightening the clamps on it too tight? Or maybe it just is a crappy filter?
Anyway...is an air leak in the fuel system consistent with the symptoms I described? I'm replacing that fuel filter with an automotive metal one for now until I can get another length of the ANSI approved fuel line I can install without a filter.
I'm just unsure if the engine surge problem is related...or if it caused the leak...or if this is all random. Anyway...any help would be much appreciated! I can't find a lot of info about the 587 engine online.