Re: Mariner 150 hard to start
You need to address the 70# compression before you do anything else. I'd pull the heads and see why. When it gets that low, it doesn't pull gas into the cylinder. The gas carries the lubrication, so it won't get lubricated and will get worse til the pistons disentegrate, destroying the block which might still be salvagable at this point. If you keep running it, it'll be scrap soon.
But first let's address your compression testing. I let the motor spin with a helathy battery with all the sparkplugs out til each cylinder has 7 to 9 strokes. You can count them by sound, it happens in 2-3 seconds. I also try to watch the gauge as I'm testing. It should reach peak compression around the fifth stroke. It's also possible that your compression gauge is inaccurate. It would be odd for all cylinders to be equally bad. You usually get a few good ones and one or more bad ones. If all six are reading 70-75#, I'd be looking into trying with another tester, or try the tester on a known healthy motor.
When compression gets low, the pistons have a hard time pulling fuel into the cylinders. If that's the case, it'll be hard to impossible to start.
Let's also go over the starting procedure...
Pump the primer bulb til firm.
Give it a little throttle
(with the warm-up lever on remotes with the key in back, or by pushing in the button in the center of the radius, or pulling out the lever whichever the case may be, and engaging Throttle-Only mode on remotes built into the side and key on the dash).
Push the key in as you turn the key to Start and keep pushing til the motor starts.
Don't keep holding it in once it starts, but you might have to give it a few quick pushes to keep it going for the first several seconds.
If that's an EFI, give it no throttle and pushing the key does nothing. You might have to give it some throttle, but try without first.