Markus wrote:
What about the oil injection system? Does anyone know anything about this? What if at higher speeds..fuel consumption is great and the oil isn't being injected into the line at the right volumes?? Is this possible? Would it cause hesitation or poor combustion?
Im not a mechanic or anything, but I did spend more than enough time working on 2-stroke engines in snowmobiles, dirtbikes and some outboards.
The oil injection systems I have workd on (primarily Yamaha and Bombardier systems) are powered by suction and have a valve that controls flow based on position of the throttle. IE - the more open the throttle is the more oil can be sucked into the engine. Real specific eh ? Well, the real reason that I am deciding to post here is that I have run a lot of gas through my high performance 2-stroke engines, and having too much oil in the gas wont cause the kinds of problems you are seeing Markus. It may be hard on the plugs and cause the machine to smoke more, but the difference between a 50:1 fuel/oil mix and something very oil rich like 20:1 is pretty small ( 2% oil vs 5% ). I even know lots of people who run pre-mixed 50:1 fuel in machines with oil injection as well - especially for break in periods. Not enough oil from the injection system is going to be pretty undetectable until the machine just keels over and dies - requiring an expensive trip to the shop to polish out the scoring and replace pistons. Not a pretty sight - been there, done that (broke the throttle cable linkage that opens and closes the oil injection valve on my snowmobile - so the engine was only getting the oil metered for idle RPM regardless of real throttle position).
To me it sure sounds like some kind of issue with the ignition system - the digital ignition systems on modern outboards are very complex - its a whole little computer in there. Its a real pain to diagnose since they only happen under certain conditions. The ignition timing curves are controlled by the digitial ignition computer based on RPM / throttle position / exhaust temp and other sensors. Unfortunately the digital ignition systems arent as simple as the older fixed ignition timing units, but they are how we get better power and efficiency from smaller motors. To me, it really sounds like you have a electronic / timing issue - maybe a faluty sensor of some kind ?.
Hope that you can find out what it is and that in the mean time the motor is servicable enough for the rest of the season.
Fox