Superjet 650 not Restarting

Location
Canada
Hi Guys,
New to stand-ups but not PWCs and just bought a SN 650. The ski has me pulling out my hair with the issues it has. The latest is that it never started easily when stopped in the water. I need to crank for a while and play with the throttle or let it sit for 15Min. It seems like it is flooding out when I kill it and is way too rich to start. So Far I have checked the following:
- rebuilt carb with pop off at 40psi.
- bought a new OEM mikuni stock superjet 650 carb as I was still convinced it was a carb issue.
- swapped CDI
- checked stator resistance
- compression is 150
- checked reeds
- checked spark.. seems good even when it doesn’t want to start
- new plugs
- check the fuel tank vent
- went really lean on the low screw which helped the restart but creates a hesitation on acceleration
- have a primer installed and when it doesn’t like to start, if I give it a pump it is way worse so this is why I am thinking it is too rich to start.
- stock engine as far as I can see and stock air box.
I haven’t check for an air leak, it seems complicated to do in place, but that might be my next step if I can’t find anything else wrong.
Really appreciate any suggestions....
 

john zigler

Vendor Account
Location
wisconsin
Yamaha's are typically VERY easy starting, especially with the carb tuned correctly. At 1st I would have guessed you have a carb / fuel issue, but with you saying you have a NEW oe carb, I am guessing you are good there.

We see many issues with old Yamaha's with ignition coils being weak, bad plug boots, etc.

I would start by changing out the plug boots, use MSD crimp on type. "IF" you have an old coil with the inner wire not being a solid core type wire, I would for sure swap the coil out.

Gap your spark plugs at .0022 to .0024

Please report back.
 
Location
Canada
I have the MSD crimp boots already installed. Primary coil resistance checks out from boot to boot. Gap was .030 so I regapped them to to your suggestion. I’ll try again at the lake but I am thinking there is something else going on. I forgot to mention that it won’t idle well in the water and eventually die out unless I crank up the idle stopper. Start stop and idle on hose are perfect. It will however run for an entire tank of gas as long as I don’t kill it or the idle drops to the point that it stalls. I feel that I am getting too much fuel at idle, but after rebuilding the first carb, then replacing it with a new OEM one I am at a loss.
 

john zigler

Vendor Account
Location
wisconsin
It should idle smooth in the water. Sounds like your carb tune is off.... You cannot tune out of the water as the engine is not underload like in the water.
 
Location
Canada
Ok, I finally found the issue. When I first inspected the reeds, I only looked quickly at the pedals. Since I was still having major issues, I decided to pull the reeds again and look closer. I finally found that the gaskets between the reed cage and manifold had blown out on both cylinders creating a small air by-pass of the reeds. New gaskets solved the issue and now it starts and restarts very easily. IMG_0154.jpg
 
Top Bottom