I had a 1974 135 hp Silver Starflight Evinrude and it had the same style trim and tilt. I liked those old OMC motors and that one is in exceptional shape.
Haven't watched the whole video yet but I'm betting its the exhaust gasket. Happened exactly like that on my 74 50hp. There are several REALLY thin spots on the water shield gasket that lets hot exhaust get blown by if the water flow isn't working ideally. Especially if someone runs it on muffs and starts at high idle where the explosion ends up in the exhaust galleries due to lack of back pressure. EDIT: Yup! That's exactly what the water gallery gaskets on the exhaust cover I had looked like. And yes, the bolt issue ugh and I ended up custom ordering them and you can get the exact ones but they aren't cheap.
Great vid I have 2 x 70hp Evinrudes 1973 vintage which are immaculate on my 24 footer. Brilliant vid in now I know what to look for.😊 they will get thorough going iver once resto finished later this year😮. Keep at it chap😅
Really enjoy watching you work Brandon. Wish I had more of your patients and determination. You've taught me a lot about OMC, and I really appreciate that.
I have a great junk pile of these triples due to this problem. There was a tech bulletin and update to the exhaust plates. The plate warps at the port allowing pressurized water to blast into the jug. The fix is find an 80's parts engine with the thicker port plate. Generally I find a resurface of the plates gets the engine a couple hours of run time before the leak starts again. BTW my manuals call for QL77J4C plugs. Not surface gap.
Very nice boat and excellent repair! I have a '72 Johnson 65 which is very similar. I get my boat out about once a week for 6 months out of the year in New York State. It sat for decades due to rot, but new deck and transom got her a new life. There is still a lot of life left in the motor. I wish I had power tilt. I have motor envy now!
As a retired, OMC technician, I can say you did this job absolutely correct by the book there is a very clean motor deserves to be taken well care of great video again good work
This thing looks like it's been taken out once per year, at most. It's great that you were able to repair the motor, so this boat can go out once per year in the future.
You did a great repair job. Some of those dealerships crack me up when they say that they do not work on vintage outboard motors. I can understand why as well when they are charging over a $100.00 an hour, and a lot may be wrong with the old motors etc. More money in your pocket, and it is good that a skilled mechanic as yourself is in that area too.
2 words: stuck and screws. the other thing is 90% of the guys that knew 2 strokes are long gone. you'd be shocked at how todays mechanics wont even touch a carb let alone rebuild one! takes me 25 min.
@@ct1762 I'm a former OMC 2 stroke Tech and left the trade in 2015, I knew nothing else but Johnson and Evinrude 2 stroke and couldn't make the transition to 4 strokes. Can't teach an old dog new tricks.
I am quite the expert on those triples. I have parts for that motor if you want. The absolute best performance enhancer for those 70s 70-75 are performance reeds. Not a high dollar part but man do they make a world of diff
Good to know. I just put a replacement powerhead ($100 eBay find!) on a ‘73 Evinrude 65. Keeping all the spare parts from the old blown block. Just gotta cure some carb needle issues, adjust the shift cable and get her on the water.
Always use gasket sealing compound on OMC head gaskets, Having just said that in fresh water use it 's not earth shattering if you don't. These are the little things you learn as a factory trained Tech. Also use QL77JC4 spark plugs not surface gap, the ignition system does not quite generate enough oomph to jump the auxiliary gap as well as the surface gap. It will also idle better (less plug fouling) and start easier.
man thats a clean motor! Still lucky to get all those screws out. exhaust plates really need to be taken to a machine shop but then again if they are under .004'' warped the gaskets will seal it just fine.
awesome video!! such a nice looking boat. Glad they found you to work on it. funny to here your daughter in the back ground, love it. nice to see you trouble shooting the problem, not like most places (we don't work on that old of boats!!). wondering if you have found any info. on the tilt and trim unit? looking for the hydraulic flow diagram.
Hi Brandon. You do A-1-A on your videos. I have the same problem on my 1990 johnson 40. I did what you did on this video, plus replace the water supply grommet. I'm still getting water in the cylinders. A small amount, but enough to notice. What's next for me? I did not detect any cracks in the block etc. I also inspected the Reed block n changed that intake gasket. Thanks bud. By the way, you must be related to Max Muncy from the Dodgers!!
Love to see freshwater motors or motors that folks flush out the salt...here on the west coast a number dealers will not even change out an impeller for less than $350 up front...then the customer says the motor is not worth $350...Salt on the Pacific Coast is nasty...some dealers will not work on a salt water motor over 10 years old...
Ouch, boats and motors I worked on when new in the mid-seventies are now antiques. Boat yard I worked at sold MFG boats, and their equivalent to that one would have been the Gypsy. And that was a popular color, too!
I'm a Merc. Fanatic but will give credit to these triple OMCs. Anyone that knows smokers should remember, cylinders like working in 3s and 4s or multiples of. I usually check clearance and toss the head gasket to get the last life outta these old OMCs. They like compression and good fuel.
Excellent... those old E/J 70's are super duper motors. I have 3. Getting someone to do something like what your are doing is... well a joke! "badges" on the seat... we don't need no stinkin' badges so... ;-)
my 0ld 50 hp Mercury is not getting water and it apprears it is leaking at the top of the pick up tube. Not from the seal around the top of the tube but out the side of a fitting. I;m guessing the bleed hose came off at the bottom. You can see it looking up from the bottom. Can it be fixed without removing power head?
When they do start, they sound like they're going straight up!! Well, he takes off across the lake, like all same, courteous, responsible boatmen do. On his way out, he takes 2 fishermen, & 1 waterskier.............
Brandon, Is there any good way to remove a cylinder head from an old outboard without breaking a head bolt? So far I am scared to try it. I have an old 1987 88hp Evinrude. I had overheat problem, replaced T - stats, and cleaned water jackets. I Broke a couple bolts on water jackets but was able to get them out. Still get overheat alarm once in a while. I want to remove heads to change out rubber water diverters but I am deadly afraid of breaking head bolts. Any suggestions? Thanks.
If you can get at them, it’s a good idea to give them all a good whack on the head as it tends to break the grip of all the corrosion and oxide that builds up in the bolt hole. Heating the block with a propane torch can expand it and loosen the grip it has on the bolt. Also work the bolt both ways back and forth once it undoes a little bit. That’s because gunk gets caught in the threads and the bolt can become tighter as it unscrews (when ch seems counter-intuitive. CRC or diesel/penetrating oil also helps.
I am assuming that you are or had to replace the exhaust baffle plate because it may be compromise with a hole which is allowing water into the cylinder. I am having the same problem with my 50 hp mercury is in the shop as of right now lol ran my 50 hp mercury Couple weeks ago ran great for about a mile and the bottom two cylinder started dropping off, 😂water in the cylinder not a lot of water, but it doesn’t take a lot of water to kill a cylinder. what’s the old saying water and fuel does not mix. 😂
The wiring is usually the first thing to go west you cant even fix it the corruption travels inside the insulation lucky the 2 stroke is a simple beast - does this model have reeds
Hi Brandon just wondering if you have an email.... my husband is looking for someone to repair his boat.. he really enjoys watching your videos and needing some help