Ok here is some background how all of this started. About a month ago I was out on one of the lakes and this particular lake has about 10-15 minute idle just to get to the ramp. Got the seadoo out of the water, started it, hit the throttle twice to get rid of all of the water as we always do, and as I let it idle for a second, I heard a weird noise (like a tractor, diesel engine noise) coming from the engine. It all happened so quickly, and these machines idle out of the water at 2200rpm, the rpm kept dropping down to almost 1600, at which time I stopped the engine on the button. Tried restarting it, the started would only click. Tried again, only a click. I assume the engine was seized at that time. I left it alone for about 10 minutes and I was able to restart and ran normally. Took it home, ran normally when I started just for a few seconds. But this incident was a concern because many times I go out on St. Claire here in Detroit, which is a huge lake and not a good place to experience any issues or seizures with the engine. When this machine was new (back in 2005) rode it for 30 hours and the engine seized. It happened right when I squeezed the throttle coming our of no wake (idling for over 10 minutes here). PPG rebuilt the engine for me under manufacturer's warranty and had not had any issues for all these years!
*** MAINTENANCE *** This machine gets a new oil filter and new spark plugs EVERY spring before the season starts regardless of their condition. RAVEs get cleaned twice a season or approximately every 15-20 hours. Jet pump oil gets replaced EVERY season regardless of its condition. Always properly winterized and stored with fogging oil and RV coolant to purge all the lake water out. Someone might say way overkilling but I like to make sure it starts when I want to go out riding :lols:
So continuing my story... pulled the RAVEs out about a month ago, found some water droplets on the MAG side RAVE (on the top of the metal - not the stem), so I kept thinking that a gasket failed. Pulled the tuned pipe and the exhaust manifold, I was hoping to see a failed exhaust and no signs of gasket failure. I cleaned everything and put it back together and torqued to the specs. After an hour back on the lake I spotted some air bubbles in the small oil lines coming out of the oil pump (yes there is another thread on this one right here on this forum). Tried bleeding the pump, no air came out, no air that I see in the filter or oil supply line. Went out riding again a few days later, and after 2.6 hrs on the machine when I came home I saw a few small air bubbles in the oil lines (this time she bubbles were smaller). During that riding time no issues on the lake. WOT ran great. idling for about 5-10 min had no issues either.
So I am now concentrating on the pump and trying to figure out what happened at the first place and why the engine seized (the seizure from a month ago was momentary and I think I stopped the engine at right time as no damage was done to the pistons - inspected with the camera).
Adjusting the oil pump correctly what they call "initial synchronization" can be tricky and depends from which angle you look at the lever. I cannot see my pump alignment marks and I have to use a small shop mirror. At the same time my eye has to be looking from the direction and angle of the engine tilt otherwise you can get a false reading. Yesterday I actually took the pump out just to look at it straight down and see the alignment marks. Just as a verification (and yes I know that can be off too because of the different cable angle.