i have a 2006 90 hp mercury two stroke, it always ran great. last week while going down the lake it just shut off. like it ran out of gas. when it stopped i fired it back up. it planed off ran great for about two minutes, same thing, shuts off again, fires back up runs great for another 2 minutes. it did this all the way back to the boat ramp. took it home changed fuel filter, changed pump up fuel bulb, changed plugs. went back to the lake, fired it up runs great. only now it has this knocking, rattelling, pecking mixed up sound. coming from the bottom of the motor and the top of the shaft. are their any way to know if its a rod or bearing problem, with out tearing down the motor. and also standing behind the motor, i can push the prop in and pull it out about 1 inch, and the nut that holds the prop on is tight. is this normal. it could be thisthing is going bad somewhere. but i thought it may be a motor rod bearing because the noise started after it shut off. any one thats had this problem and can tell me whats making this noise, i sure would be thankful. waterdog
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2006 mercury 90 hp two stroke, needs help
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From your posting several things could have occurred:
1) Engine ran lean from fuel restriction damaging a wrist pin or rod bearing
2) Lean mixture damaged lower bearing
3) Lower unit has a problem
The play in lower unit if 1 inch is a problem but up to 3/8inch in/out play is normal. Check the lower unit oil to see if it has water intrusion or metallic fragments as a chipped gear can lock up engine and transfer noise up driveshaft so it sound like lower bearing/cylinder problem. If the oil check out ok run a compression check on all cylinders, you should have 100psi or better and all cylinder shoul be within 10 psi of each other.
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Originally posted by Faztbullet View PostFrom your posting several things could have occurred:
1) Engine ran lean from fuel restriction damaging a wrist pin or rod bearing
2) Lean mixture damaged lower bearing
3) Lower unit has a problem
The play in lower unit if 1 inch is a problem but up to 3/8inch in/out play is normal. Check the lower unit oil to see if it has water intrusion or metallic fragments as a chipped gear can lock up engine and transfer noise up driveshaft so it sound like lower bearing/cylinder problem. If the oil check out ok run a compression check on all cylinders, you should have 100psi or better and all cylinder shoul be within 10 psi of each other.
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The compression reading will tell us if any sudden damage has occurred to piston & rings, such as a loose bearing/metallic debris has went down side of piston. A bad water pump will not make a noise as it is rubber with brass hub, check the gear oil as in previous post. If not the gearcase the bottom bearing on crankshaft could be bad.
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Originally posted by Faztbullet View PostThe compression reading will tell us if any sudden damage has occurred to piston & rings, such as a loose bearing/metallic debris has went down side of piston. A bad water pump will not make a noise as it is rubber with brass hub, check the gear oil as in previous post. If not the gearcase the bottom bearing on crankshaft could be bad.
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Originally posted by Faztbullet View PostPlease check the gear oil in lower unit as a bad gear can cause noise to travel up driveshaft giving the impression of a engine problem. If oil is ok then you have a internal problem with engine.
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Usually if you have a rod bearing fail the crank will usually be damaged from the rod bearing "hammering"(knock) on the journal surface. I would not order parts till you disassembled engine and found what has failed and been damaged, and you may get lucky and it be the lower bearing(cheap)that has failed.
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Originally posted by Faztbullet View PostUsually if you have a rod bearing fail the crank will usually be damaged from the rod bearing "hammering"(knock) on the journal surface. I would not order parts till you disassembled engine and found what has failed and been damaged, and you may get lucky and it be the lower bearing(cheap)that has failed.
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This is a common misconception that the "oiler" failed... If the "oil pump" had any problem it would not cause a single cylinder to fail, as mixture is sent to all the carbs,thus all cylinders would suffered lack of oil failure. Most likely you have a swollen inlet needle(from ethanol) or debris in high speed jet of lower carb.
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[QUOTE=Faztbullet;1493]This is a common misconception that the "oiler" failed... If the "oil pump" had any problem it would not cause a single cylinder to fail, as mixture is sent to all the carbs,thus all cylinders would suffered lack of oil failure. Most likely you have a swollen inlet needle(from ethanol) or debris in high speed jet of lower carb.[/QUOTE
while waiting on the rebuilding kit, I cleaned all three carbs. and all three looked like new inside. anyway, I have a question for you? if the oiler is working, the only way for a cylinder not to get oil. is for the oil to be blocked from mixing with the gas.is this right? yet, it gets enough gas for the cylinder to fire. so my way of thinking, if i mix the oil in the gas tank myself. if any gas makes it to a cylinder, it will also have the oil it needs.Last edited by waterdog101; 01-23-2010, 09:28 AM. Reason: after posting about the bearings, found the answer i was asking.
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Originally posted by Faztbullet View PostMixing your gas and oil will ensure that the cylinders are properly lubed. A flooding carb can add too much fuel and "wash" as cylinder causing failure even with oil mixed with it and too much oil can cause a lean mixture also..
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