Re: 2007 optimax 150 xl problem
The Opti's really are a "space age" design - far more techically advanced that any 4 stroke on the market.
The orbit direct injection system, used by Merc and Tohatsu uses (ultimately) two injectors per cylinder.
The first injector is fairly conventional, just like you would have on your vehicle. It injects the gas into the fuel rail.
The second injector, the "direct" injector, injects the fuel into the cylinder head once the piston has already traveled far enough to close off both the intake and exhaust ports - so no gas escapes out the exhaust like on a (conventional) 2 stroke.
The intake port on the cylinder sends an air/oil mix into the cylinder which is there "waiting for the gas" from the direct injector - so the only place your oil and gas mix is directly in the cylinder head.
The fuel in the fuel rail is pressurized to about 90 psi. These also have an "air rail" (which is integral to the fuel rail) which is pressurized by a single cylinder (piston driven) air compressor. The air is used to make sure the gas charge is pushed through the direct injector. The air rail is pressurized to about 80 psi (consistantly 10 psi less than the fuel rail and they do fluctuate in pressure) the pressure balance is tracked by the ECU by means of a MAP calibrations (manifold absolute pressure).
The tracker valve's job is to make sure that the pressure balance is always 10 psi apart as the pressure fluctuates. Each port on the fuel rail corresponds to a particular cylinder, the air rail is (common) - shared amongst all cylinders.
Yes, two fuel pumps. There is a conventional crankcase driven (diaphram) pump just like on every outboard out there which sucks the fuel from the gas tank and sends it through a water separating filter. The crankcase fuel pump maxes out at about 10 psi of fuel pressure - insufficient for direct injection.
From there the fuel goes to the vapour separater which contains the electric pump. The electric pump raises the fuel pressure to somewhat above 90 psi - required for the fuel rail. Excess fuel at the rail is first water cooled (to remove heat caused by "compressing" the fuel in the rail) and then returned to the vapour separator for "re-use" in the rail.
There are some very minimal electronic tests that can be done on these with an ohm meter, but really, for troubleshooting you really have to hook them to a DDT.
The ECU's are preprogrammed with "normal" outputs from each of the sensors. So if you disconnect one "to see if it's the problem", the ECU will pretend it's there and feed itself "what it expects to see from that sensor".
Of course, if you run with a sensor disconnected, performance and fuel economy will suck, because the "fake" readings do not change or vary.
There are complete parts diagrams available at
www.mercruiserparts.com or
www.crowleymarine.com - just to name a couple...