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Man am I pumped

"Well after a lengthy hold up

"Well after a lengthy hold up on some parts, finally starting to get the '79 115 horse Johnson back together. At least want to get in the water before winter and check her out. Ended up boring one cylinder 0.020 over, honing the others, two new pistons, cleaned up two others, new rings,wrist pins and bearings, thermostat and water pump kit. Thanks to this site and the helpfull members on getting steered in the right direction! Jonathan Taylor"
 
"Well, couldn't wait till

"Well, couldn't wait till weekend. Took the boat to the lake to run the motor some, (the lake has a 9.9 hp limit so it stayed on the trailer), but so far it ran well and sounded really well. No more misfire, no rattle noise. Run at fast idle for approximately 10 minutes, good water coming out exhaust relief and could touch the heads and exhaust cover with hand without blistering so I guess it's cooling properly. Next step is to the big lake to run through paces and hopefully I got the timer base stop adjusted back correctly,and fine tune the idle speed(idle speed screw all the way in when brother bought it). More to follow... Jonathan Taylor"
 
"Jonathan.... Don't guess

"Jonathan.... Don't guess with that timer base stop screw adjustment. You can have the timing set exactly where it belongs as follows.

(Timing At Cranking Speed 4°)
(J. Reeves)

NOTE: If your engine has the "Fast Start" feature", you must disconnect/eliminate that feature in order to use the following method. The "Fast Start" automatically advances the spark electronically when the engine first starts, dropping it to normal when the engine reaches a certain temperture.

The full spark advance can be adjusted without have the engine running at near full throttle as follows.

To set the timing on that engine, have the s/plugs out, and have the throttle at full, set that timer base under the flywheel tight against the rubber stop on the end of the full spark timer advance stop screw (wire it against that stop if necessary).

Rig a spark tester and have the gap set to 7/16". Hook up the timing light to the #1 plug wire. Crank the engine over and set the spark advance to 4° less than what the engine calls for.

I don't know the full spark advance setting your engine calls for, but to pick a figure, say your engine calls for 28°, set the timing at 24°. The reasoning for the 4° difference is that when the engine is actually running, due to the nature of the solid state ignition componets, the engine gains the extra 4°.

If you set the engine to its true setting at cranking speed, when running it will advance beyond its limit by 4° which will set up pre-ignition causing guaranteed piston damage! You don't want that to take place.

No need to be concerned about the idle timing as that will take care of itself. The main concern is the full advance setting.

Be sure to use your own engines spark advance settings, not the one I picked out of the air here in my notes.

When time permits, visit my store at: http://stores.ebay.com/Evinrude-Johnson-Outboard-Parts-etc?refid=store"
 
"Thanks a bunch Joe, yeah I&#

"Thanks a bunch Joe, yeah I'll definitely check the timer stop out. It has a jamb nut and I tried to not move it while dissassembling,but the engine was down quite a while and anything can happen. Also, I have the actual O.M.C. service manual for the eng.(a wise $70 investment). Great site with great people to help!
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Jonathan Taylor"
 
"Had this thing on the lake tw

"Had this thing on the lake two hours Friday evening. Ran like a scalded dog! The only concern, however, is I didn't see anything coming out of the tell tale. Don't know if there is a problem or I did something wrong going back together during the rebuild. But, it sure ran strong and souded great! Yeah, I'm super pumped! Jonathan Taylor"
 
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