We purchased a 2000 Air Nautique 2 weeks ago. It ran great on the test drive. We took it out last Sunday and everything was fine for the first hour but on the way back to the ramp it died and would not restart. The engine is a TBI Chevy 305. When it would not restart I took the flame arrestor off to see if fuel was spraying from the injectors while I was cranking, no fuel was spraying. I don't recall if I heard the fuel pumps running. After we got it back into storage I did hear one or both of the fuel pumps running when I cycled the ignition.
I measured the fuel pressure at the Schrader valve on the FCC with the fuel pump relay jumped out (pumps have power when ever the ignition is on). I only saw about 10psi fuel pressure. I found a PCM quick reference on the web that says TBI fuel pressure should be about 30psi. My question: Is the Schrader valve on the FCC the proper place to check the fuel pressure? There are several posts I have found that reference a link to an article on fuel pressure at the old site but the links are broken.
I measured the fuel pressure at the Schrader valve on the FCC with the fuel pump relay jumped out (pumps have power when ever the ignition is on). I only saw about 10psi fuel pressure. I found a PCM quick reference on the web that says TBI fuel pressure should be about 30psi. My question: Is the Schrader valve on the FCC the proper place to check the fuel pressure? There are several posts I have found that reference a link to an article on fuel pressure at the old site but the links are broken.
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