Isaacm1986
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- May 20, 2009
- Messages
- 1,086
I have a 1949 45hp sears motor, it runs good right now, but is there a place to buy parts for these when i need it? or am i just out of luck? thanks.



ok here are the serial and model numbers.
Serial - 67604531-1949
Model - 574.59581
If you guys can date it that would be great! are these outboards any good at all? I was thinking it was a 1949 cause on the serial it has the -1949.
thanks for the help!
It is a 1967 45hp, built by Scott-McCulloch. (McCulloch bought the old Scott-Atwater company). They were pretty decent motors. But even when new, a lot of shops wouldn't touch them. Things haven't gotten much better on that score.
Your motor got me curious about old Scott/McCollough/Elgin/Sears motors. I did a little web surfing and came across this site:
http://www.elginoutboards.org/elgin1959to63.htm
The decoding scheme listed on this page seems to suggest that your motor is a 1967.
That's odd that there would be an Elgin name on a Scott motor. Elgins were West Bend Aluminum motors, weren't they? West Bend was later bought out by Chrysler Marine and later bought out by Force.....yada yada yada.
From what I understand, McCulloch bought Scott-Attwater out in 1956 and it wasn't untill 1963 that the McCulloch brand name was put on the motors. Kinda odd to me, but oh well. I've had a couple Scotts here and they aren't bad motors. Just hard to find parts and hard to find someone (other than me) to work on them. I did have a contact for Scott parts, when I was an AOMCI member. Hard telling if he's still around, but he had a lot of stuff. If you could get on their site, you'll likely find help there with you motor.
Sears' model number prefixes indicate the mfr.
217 Eska
225 Force (Chrysler)
298 Tanaka
571 Kissel (1936-1945)
571 West Bend (1946-1960)
574 (Scott) McCulloch
582 Clinton
People woud buy Scott-Atwater motors, then try to get the main-line shops (Evinrude/Johnson/Mercury) to work on them and weren't received with many pleasantries. "Can't get parts" was the usual excuse. Truth is, they were the competition and any way to bad-mouth them was fair game. Things haven't changed much.
Where I worked, we were Scott-Atwater Service dealers (not motor dealers), and we had no problem getting parts and kept the common items in stock. That was then and this is now.