- Location
- omaha
Picked up my first freestyle ski this summer for a great price. Figured id be running into some issues with it though and sure enough they have began. First was a hole in the fuel tank, had that welded back up really nice and remounted so it doesn't happen again. After that I took it back out and the ski was still running rough. Like lugging hard anytime i touched the throttle. I made it back to the ramp and got it in the garage. Initially it didn't want to fire on the stand. I poured a little fuel in the carbs and got it running but it was revving quite high. Looking at the intake side I noticed a lot of gasket maker was used - thought maybe I had an air leak so I pulled the intake off. The first thing I found was the pulse nipple on the cases for my front carb had busted. It had previously been JB-Welded. I cleaned it up and applied some new JB-Weld - not ideal fix but it is still holding. I also found an odd combination of intake parts. X Scream intake manifold, a spacer, boysen reeds and the only paper gaskets were between the carb and speed plate. I want to have proper gaskets for all this right?
I had some concern with this manifold. The "ears" of the reed blocks (where the screws go) sat partially on the manifolds o rings. I figured this could be where my air leak was coming from. I emailed x scream and they agreed I wouldn't have a good seal with this setup. Onto of that, the thread holes for the reeds weren't even square on the manifold. I later found out that without the spacer, the reeds wont even fit in the cases due to the misalignment. My reeds are in great shape though so given all the concern I had with this manifold, I ordered a push ind. manifold that aligns and seals nicely with the boysen reeds.
After reassembling everything with new gaskets I dumped a little fuel in the carbs and fired it up and it still revved high. This time i noticed the inline fuel filter that goes to my front carb had no fuel in it. I pulled all the fuel lines going to that carb and blew them out with air. Checked the fuel pickup and it looks like its in good shape (sits about an inch above the bottom of the fuel tank). I pulled the carbs apart and everything looked pretty good to me. Im not an expert on these fuel pump carbs though so maybe i missed something. I connected the pulse line from this carb to the rear pulse fitting and cranked with plugs out and still no fuel. Ive checked idle, t-handles, Im thinking it would have to be a fuel pump issue at this point but looking for any other ideas. Ive had so much fun riding this ski but have found i have lots to learn!
I had some concern with this manifold. The "ears" of the reed blocks (where the screws go) sat partially on the manifolds o rings. I figured this could be where my air leak was coming from. I emailed x scream and they agreed I wouldn't have a good seal with this setup. Onto of that, the thread holes for the reeds weren't even square on the manifold. I later found out that without the spacer, the reeds wont even fit in the cases due to the misalignment. My reeds are in great shape though so given all the concern I had with this manifold, I ordered a push ind. manifold that aligns and seals nicely with the boysen reeds.
After reassembling everything with new gaskets I dumped a little fuel in the carbs and fired it up and it still revved high. This time i noticed the inline fuel filter that goes to my front carb had no fuel in it. I pulled all the fuel lines going to that carb and blew them out with air. Checked the fuel pickup and it looks like its in good shape (sits about an inch above the bottom of the fuel tank). I pulled the carbs apart and everything looked pretty good to me. Im not an expert on these fuel pump carbs though so maybe i missed something. I connected the pulse line from this carb to the rear pulse fitting and cranked with plugs out and still no fuel. Ive checked idle, t-handles, Im thinking it would have to be a fuel pump issue at this point but looking for any other ideas. Ive had so much fun riding this ski but have found i have lots to learn!