wakecanada
I love jetski
- Location
- whitby ontario
not alot but def get some in both cylinders and turn it over by hand a few times(with out plugs in)
ye it was saltwater..i have a day and night shift today so ill see if i can get someone to pick up my night so i can take it out today...otherwise ill have to wait until early tomorrow morning
i understand i need to ride it like my ex but i cant i have to work...i will ride it as soon as i can trust me
It's pretty simple. Turn the ski upside down as much as you can (you can do this even by yourself). Let as much water as possible drain out before hitting that start button.
I find the best way is to stand the ski on its nose, then lower it to almost horizontal, upside down. Obviously, you want two or more people for this.
Crank until most water is out.
Set the ski back down. If you think there may be water in the tank, there are extra steps (see end of the post)
Clean the plugs, pour just a little bit of premix into the plug holes and install plugs.
Rock the ski slightly on it's side so that the exhaust sits lower.
Now start it. Should start within a couple of cranks if you did everything right. Get on the throttle and blow it out.
If your tank has water in it:
Let the ski sit for about a half hour.
Disconnect the fuel line reaching furthest to the bottom of the tank from the/a carb(s). On a stock setup, that'd be the reserve line. (and you'd disconnect it at the reserve switch) On dual feed line setups, just use one of the two lines.
Hold that line overboard and blow into the tank vent valve. You want to pressurize the tank. This will force whatever is at the bottom of the tank to come out the disconnected line. Watch what comes out. It's pretty easy to tell if you're getting water. Stop when the water stops.
Done.
In my front yard, with someone screaming at the Yummi Meats salesperson.
:lmao: