Re: 7.5 hp merc missing
I'm no expert, but have dealt with a similar problem on my '74 9.8 hp. Maybe theres' enough similiarities to help you.
Here's excerpts from my story from a previous post I made:
'74 merc 9.8
...this ignition has parts under the fly wheel with wires running to a switch box. The switch box has + and - wires running to each of two ignition coils which are also grounded to the mounting bracket. Each coil fires a cylinder.
I was losing a cylinder intermittently only at lowest rpms. Sometimes it would get really rough, running on one cyllinder when I was trolling - but only intermittently. It would reun consistently at higher rpms. ...when running in the barrel, it starts fine, but when idled down as low as it will go, it would be fine for a while then lose the cylinder and die unless I revved it up. The cylinder would kick back on if I gave it a little gas to higher idle.
I exchanged the plugs - no change in cylinder affected.
Exchanged coils and the same cylinder still went dead (lower). Got out the spark tester. One coil would give strong, blue 3/8 inch spark, the other nothing most of the time, occasionally a good looking spark.
Switched coils - good and bad spark did NOT follow coils.
Switched plug wires - spark did NOT follow plug wire.
In other words, the good spark stayed with the switch box leads that fire the top cylinder regardless of coil or plug wire. So I'm thinking switch box or the parts under the fly wheel, neither of which I can really analyze..
... I disconnected, cleaned up and reconnected every ignition wire I could find, testing the spark as above each time I cleaned up something. None of them were obviously badly corroded. None of this helped.
Finally I brought it to a shop and they checked the parts under the fly wheel and thought every thing was OK. They replaced the switch box and the engine ran great.
I recommend trying everything you can before the switch box because they can be very expensive ($2-300 for mine!!). The coils aren't cheap ,but not real bad - plus it's easy to see if the dead spark (if that's what it is) follows a coil or not.