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GP1200R dies in water|
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Bought a 2001 GP1200R from a guy on my lake, only had 25 hours on it, but he said, after the first year it "never ran right" so I got it very inexpensively. Got it home, charged the battery, and started. It runs fine on the trailer dry, but when I opened the hose to provide water, it immediately dies. Would get it started again dry, but immediatly dies again with water. Checked the compression, 118 across all three cylinders. I then bought a "d" plate and chip, and swapped out the cat conv. It then seemed to run fine on the trailer with the hose hooked up and open. I thought the problem was fixed, so dumped it in the lake, and went about 30 yards, and quit. Pulled the plugs, two had water droplets on them. Back on the trailer, it re-started and runs fine dry. Figured, maybe a leaking head gasket, so pulled the head, everything looked perfect, no bridging across the gaskets, or other noticable issues. So now I'm trying to figure out where the water is entering the cylinders. Have there ever been issues with cracked exhaust manifolds that let water enter the exhaust stream? I was thinking that maybe the previous owner let water freeze int the engine, and possibly cracked something. Does anyone know what usually crack due to freezing, does water enter the case halves, or just the cylinders? Any help would be appreciated
thanks for your help |
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118 is alittle low but still do-able.it sounds like she's hydrolocking. i know it's alittle work but i'd pull the manifold off and look for cracks. you should see where the water travels and where the exhaust travels.Also on the bottom of the manifold there's a rubber hose where water enters ,theres a valve in there that i had go bad on my ski that let water in the engine.another thing i would check into is with the compression being low across the board is it not strong enough to keep the water out?....hope this helps
mike MY STATS: 06'YAMAHA GP1300R RIVA INTAKE GRATE RIVA RIDE PLATE(shimed!) RIVA TRIM TABS RIVA D-PLATE RIVA PUMP SEAL KIT STEPPED SPONSONS i get approx. 78 mph on the speedo! in the back bays....8-) |
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I took some advice and drained the 11 gallons of gas in the ski dry, replace it with fresh, and dropped it in. It ran better, but still would only pull for a few seconds, then die. I pulled the plugs, this time they were clean, no water, so I knew it was something else. I pulled the carbs off, and opened one up. It was pretty grimey in there, so I ordered three rebuild kits. They arrived and I rebuilt them, one by one. When I got to the third carb, noticed that the fuel pump gaskets were put in backwards!. Fixed that, re-assembled the ski, and now it runs perfect.
It seems that the original owner had the ski sink off his dock at the lake the first year he owned it (2001). He brought it into the Yamaha dealer he bought it from in Connecticut (initials are "r"'s,) and they cleaned it up, rebuilt the carbs, charged him a lot of money, and he brought it home. According to him, it "never ran right again" after that, and it basically ended up sitting around covered for 6 years, (only 25 hours on it when I got it this year for $200). Anyway, a bunch of hours troubleshooting, a few hundred dollars in parts (carb kits, D-plate, chip), and it's right again. Be careful who works on your stuff, even dealers screw up sometimes! |
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GP1200R dies in water
