I post this knowing I'll never sell one of my old outboards to a club member after this but, I was reading the shop manual for Johnson/Evinrude and was amazed at the amount of maintenance they recommend. For example, after running your outboard in fresh water, you should flush it with clear water for 5-10 minutes. If you ran it in saltwater, you should flush for more than 15 minutes. I've never flushed an outboard after running in fresh water. I guess they might be talking about really silted water or something but why run tap water through at outboard that has been running in a lake so clean you can see bottom in 10 feet or more of water? When I run in salt, I hose the outboard off and then flush for at most 5 minutes. In about 40 years and more than a dozen outboards, I've never had to go inside a motor for repairs. Sure, fuel pumps, water impellers, plugs, plug wires, carb cleaning and even points, condensers and such on 60 year old "collector" motors. Never been in around rings, etc.
I've dropped outboards in lakes while running, saltwater while not running. Most of the time, I pulled the plugs, dried things out and sprayed a lot of WD40 and ran the motor trouble free for another 10 years or so and they were still running fine when I passed them along to the next owner.
I lean toward, if it works, don't mess with it. How about the rest of you? I'm guessing there are some as bad as me and some that do more maintenance than the service manual says.
What say you?
Jerry:boater1:
I've dropped outboards in lakes while running, saltwater while not running. Most of the time, I pulled the plugs, dried things out and sprayed a lot of WD40 and ran the motor trouble free for another 10 years or so and they were still running fine when I passed them along to the next owner.
I lean toward, if it works, don't mess with it. How about the rest of you? I'm guessing there are some as bad as me and some that do more maintenance than the service manual says.
What say you?
Jerry:boater1:
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