Welcome, Guest
Username: Password: Remember me
  • Page:
  • 1

TOPIC: 71 Evenrude is stuck

71 Evenrude is stuck 14 years 2 months ago #14644

  • mgbbob
  • mgbbob's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Fresh Boarder
  • Fresh Boarder
  • Posts: 47
  • Karma: 1
  • Thank you received: 0
HI folks,

I have a 65 15' glass boat (unknown manufacturer) with a 85 HP Evenrude that needs help. It is for sale but if it doesn't sell then maybe I will try to get it running.

I pulled the boat from my family lake site in 1995 when the property sold. I left it outside for the winter covered. A hail storm destoryed the cover and when I went to check on the boat it had been exposed to the weather for several months.

I pulled the spark plugs, oiled the cyclinders and had no luck. The motor seems firmly stuck. Someone told me it might be the water pump.

Any ideas? If I need parts are there sources?

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re:71 Evenrude is stuck 14 years 2 months ago #14646

Greetings sir - check the thread "My civic duty fllfilled". There is alot of discussion towards the end about unsticking the '54 15HP I pulled off a scrap pile.

My suggestion here is to position the motor such that the spark holes are a verticle as possible. Squirt a healthy ration of PB Blaster or Liquid Wrench into each cylnder. Let it sit for awhile. Then a strap wrench around the fly wheel and see if you can break it free.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re:71 Evenrude is stuck 14 years 2 months ago #14655

My feeling is that any stuck motor worth saving is worth saving right - tear it down. Even if you manage to free it up without taking it apart you risk blowing up the motor if you have any rusted bearings inside.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re:71 Evenrude is stuck 14 years 2 months ago #14659

Chinewalker wrote:

My feeling is that any stuck motor worth saving is worth saving right - tear it down. Even if you manage to free it up without taking it apart you risk blowing up the motor if you have any rusted bearings inside.


I concur.. however, An "unstuck" motor is very much easier to disassemble than one that is stuck. Try to get her broke free.. then disassemble.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re:71 Evenrude is stuck 14 years 2 months ago #14967

  • mgbbob
  • mgbbob's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Fresh Boarder
  • Fresh Boarder
  • Posts: 47
  • Karma: 1
  • Thank you received: 0
Ok guys. I have tools, a manual, some experience and lots of doubts. I plan on starting this weekend by resoaking the cyclinders and try to pop it loose. I will plan on removing the motor from the boat for work this winter. Here goes nothing.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re:71 Evenrude is stuck 14 years 2 months ago #14986

69Fabuglas wrote:

Chinewalker wrote:

My feeling is that any stuck motor worth saving is worth saving right - tear it down. Even if you manage to free it up without taking it apart you risk blowing up the motor if you have any rusted bearings inside.


I concur.. however, An "unstuck" motor is very much easier to disassemble than one that is stuck. Try to get her broke free.. then disassemble.


I disagree - if a bearing is where the "stuck" is, then you've freed it up as soon as you remove the crankshaft. If it's a piston that's stuck, it is much easier to press it out with a press from the crankcase side than it is to hammer on it with a block of wood. I've pulled down more stuck motors than most - done it both ways. Tearing it apart first is flat out easier by a long shot... plus you have much less risk of damaging something in the process.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Re:71 Evenrude is stuck 14 years 2 months ago #15005

  • mgbbob
  • mgbbob's Avatar Topic Author
  • Offline
  • Fresh Boarder
  • Fresh Boarder
  • Posts: 47
  • Karma: 1
  • Thank you received: 0
I was thinking about trying another round of penetrating oil this weekend but if the right solution is disassembly then I would think the next step is to pull the motor.

I was thinking of mounting the motor on a stand in the garage and placing the boat outside covered up for the duration.

I have an automotive engine stand that I thought might be adaptable. I can build a stand if necessary. Any good ideas?

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

  • Page:
  • 1
Time to create page: 0.175 seconds

Donate

Please consider supporting our efforts.

Glassified Ads

1967 23 ft powercat flybridge
( / Boats)

noimage
11-17-2024

Mercury outboard
( / Engines)

noimage
11-03-2024

Classic Mercury Outboard Motors
( / Engines)

Classic Mercury Outboard Motors
10-18-2024

FG Login

FiberGoogle

Who's Online

We have 8806 guests and no members online