And then there is me (sigh!).... Back in the early 1960's (1961)when brass fixed high speed jets first came upon the OMC scene and I was doing my thing in a serious manner in a little town in southern New Jersey, I came upon one 1961 V4 75hp Johnson that (right out of the box) that was extremely hard to start (wrong jets). I had visions of OMC completely doing away with adjustable needle valves, dreading the boating future.
Then, still in NJ came the early 1970's and the slow speed jets... many hard starting engines, lean running engines, engines that simply wouldn't idle. There were no service bulletins stuffed in those engine crates and ingenuity became part of the serious minded outboard mechanic's procedure (yes, mechanics, we didn't become technicians until many years later!).
At that time of the procession of the outboard engine engineering bit, we (my fellow mechanic and I), didn't have time to give it too much thought excepting in having the mindset to know from experience that we had a fuel problem that had to be enriched, and that the I.D. of those small brass slow speed fuel jets needed to be increased, and not having a supply of various size jets on hand... the solution was to drill them out, that is when we found the affected cylinder so as not to drill a proper acting jet.
Fortunately our local tool supplier was on hand and we simply purchased a set of drill bits graduated in thousands along with the tool to grip them. No time to get fussy, thinking of a possible mark the bit might make and the consequences that may follow... it was just a case of that big bruiser standing there with his family, a frown on his face, waiting to get that rig in the water, with his new engine shaking from side to side going spit spit, cough, sneeze... and he wanted that cured before he drove that rig out the gate... and we (my fellow mechanic and I) did so want him to smile and be happy.
As it turned out, the malfunctioning slow speed jets (two of them) were size .029 ... one size bigger, hmm, a little better, enlarging it to .031 cured the starting and idle problem. Such a small increase of fuel but a huge effect. And we had a happy family going boating.
Then came the "Idle Air Bleed" jets (sigh!). Yes, I had the foresight to acknowledge the "air" jets needed a decrease in I.D. size to enrichen the mixture (a complete reversal of our former "fuel jet" procedure). Many mechanics didn't at first which led to their actions adding to the problem. However, as time passed, knowledge increased... and all was well in OMC-ville once more.
Bottom line... As crude as simply drilling a fuel or air jet may be and throwing caution to the wind be pertaining to nicks, swirls, digs, etc... it's always worked for me. And when it gets too complicated and I feel I may be getting into a bit of something that's over my head... I'll quit!
Oh wait, Damn!... I already did, didn't I ?
