Mystery Shutdown

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  • JimPendoley
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2011
    • 12

    Mystery Shutdown

    Hi All,
    So I'm anchored at a very remote protected spot in Northern New England getting ready to troubleshoot my A4. I started shutting down in boisterous conditions on a fair heel (20 degrees) while approaching the channel-I was motorsailing.

    Symptoms were a sputtering shutdown. Before you say "dirty fuel or sediment stirred up" I have a racor fuel/water separator and add Stabil fuel stabilizer with every fill up. Key symptoms were an audible and soft "thunk" as though I'd hit a lobster pot and then a stuttering shutdown. Another key symptom is THE TACH stopped working. The engine would restart, run a minute or so and shut back down in a sputtering way. This happened a half dozen times. I finally flattened the boat out and got the engine started and ran in on lower power with out incident-but STILL NO TACH. No water in the bilge and prop seems to turn freely.

    From reading other threads I am guessing intermittent coil failure or facet fuel pump failure. I have an Ignitor ignition and the fuel pump is wired with an oil pressure safety switch.
    Any suggestions on simple diagnostic troubleshooting greatly appreciated as i am far away from help.
    Thanks
    Jim Pendoley
  • smosher
    Afourian MVP
    • Jun 2006
    • 489

    #2
    Where is the tach connected ?

    Steve

    Comment

    • Dave Neptune
      Afourian MVP, Professor Emeritus
      • Jan 2007
      • 5044

      #3
      Ouch

      Jim, welcome to the forum.
      As you were heeling a bit you may check the oil level. If it is low it could cause the OPSS to go intermittent and cause a sputtering stall~~however doubtful. A sputtering shut down does imply a fuel related problem and the electric pump going off and on could maybe do the same.
      Re your tach quiting it may not be related as you did start back up. I don't think I would worry to much about the tach at this time.
      Since you are stuck I would drain a bit of fuel from the float bowl just to confirm water in the fuel is not the problem.
      How did it run once you got her stood uprignt again? Mostly did you have a bit of power available or did you try to throttle up a bit? Did you take a look at the plugs and if so how did they look? I would also check all of the ignition connections at the coil and especially the key switch. If the ones on the switch are even suspected I would try to hot wire her and see if that helps. While motor sailing at 20 degrees you may have shook something up by loosening an electrical connection or even shook some KRAP loose in the tank and the filters are a bit plugged.
      We need to narrow some possibilities down a bit.

      Dave Neptune

      Comment

      • Loki9
        • Jul 2011
        • 379

        #4
        Is it a mechanical tach or electrical? It's conceivable that an electrical tach could short out the ignition circuit in some way. Perhaps healing over allowed a loose wire to contact something it shouldn't?
        Jeff Taylor
        Baltic 38DP

        Comment

        • edwardc
          Afourian MVP
          • Aug 2009
          • 2491

          #5
          A "thump" and the tach quit? My first thought was that you threw an alternator belt. Some tachs use an alternator takeoff to get their signal. No belt, no signal. Easy to check!

          And if you've got some corrosion in the battery wiring, maybe the loss of the alternator might drop the voltage enough to run rough. Not too sure about the possibility of this one though.
          @(^.^)@ Ed
          1977 Pearson P-323 "Dolce Vita"
          with rebuilt Atomic-4

          sigpic

          Comment

          • lat 64
            Afourian MVP
            • Oct 2008
            • 1964

            #6
            low oil?

            Your're probly in good hands here, but I would add low oil level to the list of checks.

            Low oil level, boat heels and flops around, oil pump goes dry, oil pressure drops, fuel pump shuts down and engine runs down on remaining gas in carb.

            Just a wild guess

            Good luc,
            Russ
            sigpic Whiskeyjack a '68 Columbia 36 rebuilt A-4 with 2:1

            "Since when is napping doing nothing?"

            Comment

            • Marian Claire
              Afourian MVP
              • Aug 2007
              • 1768

              #7
              Another welcome. I know you said not to ask but do you have a spare fuel filter? Prier to cleaning my tank I had shut downs in rough conditions because the filter was doing its job and becoming clogged with crud. Dan S/V Marian Claire
              Edit: The first thing I would check is flow to the carb. Disconnect the line at the carb, bypass the OPSS and see what flow you have. Is the pump ticking? If low then I would check all the connections, if one is loose it could be sucking air and recheck. If low replace the filter and recheck. If still low the pick up tube could be clogged and blowing back thru the system could clear that. If you have good flow then we can move to the carb, OPSS, coil etc. Could you give us a description of your fuel system set up from tank to carb? Do you have a spare fuel pump?
              Last edited by Marian Claire; 11-16-2011, 03:45 AM.

              Comment

              • Mo
                Afourian MVP
                • Jun 2007
                • 4468

                #8
                Hi,
                Sputtering then the engine picks up, sputters again, may run perfect for seconds or minutes then starts again. Loss of power....sounds like it is missing and a thud like you mentioned....I'm thinking water in fuel. Was your fuel tank vent on the side you were healed on?

                Happened to me Summer 2010; I changed out ignition parts, coil, points and condenser, plugs, cap...the works...and it didn't change. Then I went for fuel and found the culprit...water and lots of it. I looked after my fuel, had water separator and in-line filter as well. Changed the filters 3 times before I got it to run half decent and eventually had to suck water from the bottom of the tank.

                How it got there? Either I put in bad gas (gas stn must have had water in tanks) or it sucked in through the vent. I was on a cruise at the time.
                Mo

                "Odyssey"
                1976 C&C 30 MKI

                The pessimist complains about the wind.
                The optimist expects it to change.
                The realist adjusts the sails.
                ...Sir William Arthur Ward.

                Comment

                • dvd
                  Senior Member
                  • Dec 2008
                  • 449

                  #9
                  Possible Coil Failure

                  Jim,

                  I recently had somewhat similar problems with my A-4 and sure enough it was as you suspected, the coil. It appears that the electronic ignition is the thing that seems to cause these coil failures. Your original comment indicates that you were able to restart you engine. How much time would you have to sit before it would restart? If it was immediately then maybe not the coil.

                  When my coil failed I could restart my motor after about 15 or 20 minutes. It would run for maybe a half hour before doing it again. During these periods my coil would be to hot to touch. (actually hotter than the engine)

                  I think there is alot of information on previous posts about this coil issue. I fortunately had the original oil filled coil to replace the bad one but I think it may start happening again. I think the consensus is if it is your coil that if you replace it with a 4 ohm oil filled coil that should do it.

                  DVd

                  Comment

                  • smosher
                    Afourian MVP
                    • Jun 2006
                    • 489

                    #10
                    Which coil did you have, I'm guessing a pertronix.

                    Steve

                    Comment

                    • Kelly
                      Afourian MVP
                      • Oct 2004
                      • 662

                      #11
                      To be fair to Pertronix, my history of coil failures has run through three different manufacturers spanning two continents. I believe the heart of the problem lies in the coil internal resistance more than in any given brand.
                      Kelly

                      1964 Cheoy Lee Bermuda Ketch, Wind and Atomic powered

                      sigpic

                      Comment

                      • Dave Neptune
                        Afourian MVP, Professor Emeritus
                        • Jan 2007
                        • 5044

                        #12
                        Hello out there

                        Jim, you still out there? Did you get her running again?

                        Dave Neptune

                        Comment

                        • JOHN COOKSON
                          Afourian MVP, Professor Emeritus
                          • Nov 2008
                          • 3500

                          #13
                          Things That Go Bump In The Night (Or Day): Usually Not Good!

                          Originally posted by JimPendoley View Post
                          Key symptoms were an audible and soft "thunk" as though I'd hit a lobster pot and then a stuttering shutdown. Another key symptom is THE TACH stopped working. The engine would restart, run a minute or so and shut back down in a sputtering way. This happened a half dozen times. I finally flattened the boat out and got the engine started and ran in on lower power with out incident-but STILL NO TACH.
                          Was the bump the fuel tank shifting? Did a shifting fuel tank somehow goof up the fuel delivery system to the engine? Maybe by crushing the outlet fitting on the tank? Did a shifting fuel tank somehow crush the tank vent?
                          Was there enough fuel in the tank so you were getting a solid pull of fuel when the boat was heeled?
                          Did a shifting fuel tank crush the lead to the tach?
                          Just trying to connect the dots using the information presented...........

                          TRUE GRIT

                          Comment

                          • sastanley
                            Afourian MVP
                            • Sep 2008
                            • 6986

                            #14
                            John,

                            I never thought of that, but now that you mention it, certainly a possibility...I had my tank shift on me the first few months after installation when one of the hold down clamps popped loose!

                            We need the OP to come back now...we have certainly given him LOTS of possibilities!!!???
                            -Shawn
                            "Holiday" - '89 Alura 35 #109
                            "Twice Around" - '77 C-30, #511 with original A-4 & MMI manifold - SOLD! (no longer a two boat owner!!)
                            sigpic

                            Comment

                            • JimPendoley
                              Senior Member
                              • Nov 2011
                              • 12

                              #15
                              Mystery shutdown

                              Hello Afourians,
                              I'm safely back from my little excursion, snugged into my winter slip (I'm a liveaboard) in NH. Here is the update: Engine ran for several hours while anchored and pushed me home through flat seas at 5 1/2 knots for a three hours. Not even a hiccup. Only thing I did was add oil to the fourth line on the old style dipstick and drain the fuel separator bowl (the gas looked clean).

                              I added oil on the suspicion that the OPSS was possibly being deprived of oil. I had always followed the original Universal recommendations for filling only to the second mark on the dipstick for a horizontal engine (not installed on an incline), but I share other posters belief that it might be causing the switch to shutdown if deprived of oil on a steep heel. I now have oil filled to the fourth hash mark on the dip stick.-from what I've read here or elsewhere overfill is not much of a risk on these engines.

                              I still don't know for sure if the oil pressure switch was the cause or not. I think I've at least eliminated oil deprivation to the swich as a cause in the future. If it was the switch though, I don't completely understand how the tach shorted-could a stuttering of the ignition short an electronic tach?

                              I'd also like to thank everyone for your thoughtful responses. I was in a ticklish spot and all of your input was reassuring as I puzzled over the problem.

                              Comment

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