Long story short, a friend is letting us borrow his Sea-doo for a while, so long as we can fix it. My dad and I are pretty good with engines and troubleshooting. I'm looking for a second opinion on whether we should take this thing to a shop and have them work on it, or try to fix it ourselves.
The PWC in question is a lightly abused 2001 Seadoo GTS with a 2-stroke, carbureted engine.
Problems we are having:
What we know:
I'm putting blame on the carburetor jets for getting gummed up. That would explain the rough idle, and why it cuts out even faster when throttle is applied. My guess is the lack of stabilizer has caused the ethanol in the gasoline to degrade (this happens all the time in airplane engines that I work on; be careful with mo-gas).
I'm thinking about taking apart the carburetor and soaking it in carb cleaner. How difficult is this, and would it be worth it just to take it to the shop to have it done? How much should a job like this cost?
Thanks!
The PWC in question is a lightly abused 2001 Seadoo GTS with a 2-stroke, carbureted engine.
Problems we are having:
- Starting the engine takes a while to catch.
- Once running, it takes forever to warm up.
- While warming, the idle is very rough. Much rougher than any two stroke I have ever dealt with.
- If left alone, it will run for about 30 seconds before it quits.
- After that, it's extremely difficult to crank back up.
- If it does crank, it will only run for 5-10 seconds before turning back off.
- Any addition in throttle only quickens the engine's death.
- It smokes pretty bad (Even for a 2 stroke).
What we know:
- Plugs are fine. They are sparking well.
- Battery is new.
- Gas is old. I doubt the owner put in any stabilizer before winter storing.
I'm putting blame on the carburetor jets for getting gummed up. That would explain the rough idle, and why it cuts out even faster when throttle is applied. My guess is the lack of stabilizer has caused the ethanol in the gasoline to degrade (this happens all the time in airplane engines that I work on; be careful with mo-gas).
I'm thinking about taking apart the carburetor and soaking it in carb cleaner. How difficult is this, and would it be worth it just to take it to the shop to have it done? How much should a job like this cost?
Thanks!