- Location
- florida
ahh duhh stupid me lmao, i would have re read it eventually but thanks for putting it all in one place, if the needle and seat fail my inspection, which needle and seat should i get 1.0 1.5 and 2.0 are the options i think?
there is one needle and one seat per carb. the needle and seat are a matched pair...the seat is just a brass barrel, and the needle is like a short, stubby pencil sitting in the seat.
take the carb out of the ski & pull off the diamond shaped cover on the side of the carb. lift off the round diaphram gasket. with the air intake up, the needle & seat is on the left...under that silver spring loaded arm. push down on the other end of the arm (dead center of the gasket circle) and the needle lifts up. take that all apart and clean it...if the black rubber tip of the needle has a groove worn around it that's a good clue it needs to be replaced.
And, other point: it has been mentioned here several times, but I'm not certain you've noticed: there is a fuel filter IN THE CARB. It's on the other side...the square side (fuel pump). Undo those covers and lift out the black plastic round barrel. It's probably gunked up...and is a key root cause of a ski that dies after 10 minutes or so. While you are in the fuel pump side: also inspect the 2 round clear discs that are held in place by a black rubber grommet through their center. If they are kinked or any other hint that they are not sealing around the edge then replace them.
will definitely inspect the switch tomorrow while doing the carb, and as far as all the connections i checked and replaced all corroded ones when i replaced my coil about a week ago so im 99.9% possitive my problem is not thereI had a metal part in my stop switch break from fatigue, that sucker drove me nuts because it would die at what seemed to be completely random times. What I figured out was when the broken piece would vibrate over and make contact between both the metal pieces in the housing it would kill the engine. Sometimes this would result in a similar situation as yourself where the ski wouldn't start back up when out on the water, what that was from in my case was because the handle pole was all the way down and the ski was tipped back slightly from me hanging behind it in the water and it would allow that metal piece to fall toward the back of the ski and short out the switch. Once I made it to shore the ski would fire up again because I was standing next to it and would lift the pole up to push the start button, because the pole was now at an angle the little metal piece wouldn't make contact anymore (unless I set the pole down and vibration moved the metal piece).
If that's not it you might want to help eliminate another potential issue by disconnecting every electrical connection you can find (one at a time), inspect them and make sure they're not corroded, then reconnect them to make sure they have good contact (adding dielectric grease to the connectors wouldn't be a bad idea either).
Good luck!