gazzaskirepair
Active Member
Well check on the running machine compression and use that to gauge the problem ski
25 what psi Lbspersquareinch ???
Sounds like it’s a bum gauge
25 what psi Lbspersquareinch ???
Sounds like it’s a bum gauge
not necessarily, one of my kawasakis blew up recently, although it was obvious the some of the piston went to the bottom of the lake lol. 30 psi one one cylinder and 150 on the other. It still tried to turn over and even started on the lake. Although engines that aren't blown but are low on compression will turn over just fine. If you want to be sure, I know autoparts stores rent out compression tester kits which will give you an accurate reading, I would rather you just get the health of the motor done first before spending more money than you'd need to if it does read low. You mentioned you rebuilt the carbs but never mentioned if you used aftermarket or mikuni kits?I know I need to get a good compression test, but does the fact that it turns over, even for a short bit, likely mean the engine isn't screwed up
I'll get a good accurate reading and report backnot necessarily, one of my kawasakis blew up recently, although it was obvious the some of the piston went to the bottom of the lake lol. 30 psi one one cylinder and 150 on the other. It still tried to turn over and even started on the lake. Although engines that aren't blown but are low on compression will turn over just fine. If you want to be sure, I know autoparts stores rent out compression tester kits which will give you an accurate reading, I would rather you just get the health of the motor done first before spending more money than you'd need to if it does read low. You mentioned you rebuilt the carbs but never mentioned if you used aftermarket or mikuni kits?
Good call, I'll check that tooI suspect the fuel️ pump isn’t sucking fuel from the tank although he said he put fuel down the plug holes
Need to check underneath . Have a look at jet pump to make sure you have a clearance all round to make sure it not causing a resistance on engine
And yes, I used mikuni rebuild kitsnot necessarily, one of my kawasakis blew up recently, although it was obvious the some of the piston went to the bottom of the lake lol. 30 psi one one cylinder and 150 on the other. It still tried to turn over and even started on the lake. Although engines that aren't blown but are low on compression will turn over just fine. If you want to be sure, I know autoparts stores rent out compression tester kits which will give you an accurate reading, I would rather you just get the health of the motor done first before spending more money than you'd need to if it does read low. You mentioned you rebuilt the carbs but never mentioned if you used aftermarket or mikuni kits?
Not sure if your ski is set up the same way but on my rear electrical box there are 2 posts that hold spark plug wires when working on engine so look for something like that on yours and Take boots of the plugs and attach the plugs to the above mentioned posts. Take spark plugs out and give full throttle and motor eng until gauge peaks then check opposite cylinder. I would do each cylinder 3 times to get an average.Before I set out on re-testing compression. Is the whole process taking the boots off the plugs, taking one plug out, screwing in the tester and turn over the engine for about 5 seconds. Then unhook the tester and replace the plug, then unscrew the other plug and screw in the tester and turn the engine over again for about 5 seconds.
Is this correct? Do I need to take off the airbox or do anything else to properly test?
Yes, I have those spark plug holders. But how do I full throttle without plugs? Or, do I just push the throttle to full power and then hit the starter, knowing it won't fully start?Not sure if your ski is set up the same way but on my rear electrical box there are 2 posts that hold spark plug wires when working on engine so look for something like that on yours and Take boots of the plugs and attach the plugs to the above mentioned posts. Take spark plugs out and give full throttle and motor eng until gauge peaks then check opposite cylinder. I would do each cylinder 3 times to get an average.
Perfect. Thank youJust hold throttle at full while cranking the engine over until gauge peaks
So, all cylinders need to be opened?So basically rip the cylinder head off
BTW if that’s good Gauge your compression is down on all cylinders good and bad machine
120 and above is good I believe
Okay, thank you. That's good newsYour gauge is bad as others have said. Do not pull apart the good ski!
Well, unfortunately, I don't have an engine hoist and we're getting snow in places here. So it may be a job I have to tackle next spring and I'll buy a host at that timeAt this point with zero compression on one cylinder there’s no real reason to winterize.
Without it running you can’t blow the water out or add antifreeze to prevent freezing.
If you can now would be the time to pull the engine so you can rebuild it over the winter.