My sister and her husband have a 2001 2-stroke 240 EFI Seadoo Speedster that won’t stay running. They are not mechanically minded people at all so are completely in the dark about this stuff. The boat was launched for the season about 2 weeks ago when her 2 teenage sons drove the boat for about 45 minutes and did not report problems. The boat then sat for a couple of weeks and was re-started this past weekend when it would not run. She took it to the local marina and they are saying 4 of the 6 cylinders are bad and the engine needs to be replaced. I am going to call the marina for more details but I assume the oil injection pump went out or the boat was launched this summer without any 2-stroke oil in it at all. Is checking the 2 stroke oil levels something the marina should have done prior to de-winterizing the boat? Given their non-mechanically mindedness, I would not be surprised if they (the boat owners) did not realize it needs 2 stroke oil at all.
Assuming the engine needs replacement, what should they expect to pay? Do marinas typically rebuild these engines or seek remanufactured engines from Crowley or some other outfit?
How difficult a job is it to remove this engine for replacement and can it be done on a trailer? I am a car guy and have rebuild auto engines before, so if the estimate is too high I might consider either buying a power head or attempting to rebuild theirs, but I’m 350 miles away so I’d need to drive up, pull it out, bring it home for the work and then back again so if it is not possible to do “in the field” I won’t even suggest it.
Assuming the engine needs replacement, what should they expect to pay? Do marinas typically rebuild these engines or seek remanufactured engines from Crowley or some other outfit?
How difficult a job is it to remove this engine for replacement and can it be done on a trailer? I am a car guy and have rebuild auto engines before, so if the estimate is too high I might consider either buying a power head or attempting to rebuild theirs, but I’m 350 miles away so I’d need to drive up, pull it out, bring it home for the work and then back again so if it is not possible to do “in the field” I won’t even suggest it.