Brian E. Evans
Cadet
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2008
- Messages
- 14
I have a 2003 Mercury 4 hp 4 stroke that got very hard to turn over and finally got to the point where it refused to start.
I took it to my local dealer who removed the lower unit, in doing this, the drive shaft stuck up in the power head, destroying the pump housing as he pulled the unit off.
At this point he gave the engine back to me and told me it would cost more to fix than it was worth.
Out of curiosity I went ahead and pulled the power head ,and found that the the drive shaft was stuck in the housing that holds the oil seals. I removed this from the engine and found that the engine turned over easily.
The oil seal housing felt like it was welded to the shaft.
I tried placing the oil seal housing in a vice and drifting the drive shaft out, the housing promptly broke in half.
I then discovered a layer of corrosion had built up inside the housing until it was gripping the shaft like glue, the corrosion was also so hard you could barely scratch it with a screwdriver.
Has anybody heard of this problem before with these motors, or the other brands that are the same motor? I have four more of these motors on other boats, they are all flushed with fresh water after each use.
Would it be worth pulling the power heads to check this on each motor?
Brian Evans.
I took it to my local dealer who removed the lower unit, in doing this, the drive shaft stuck up in the power head, destroying the pump housing as he pulled the unit off.
At this point he gave the engine back to me and told me it would cost more to fix than it was worth.
Out of curiosity I went ahead and pulled the power head ,and found that the the drive shaft was stuck in the housing that holds the oil seals. I removed this from the engine and found that the engine turned over easily.
The oil seal housing felt like it was welded to the shaft.
I tried placing the oil seal housing in a vice and drifting the drive shaft out, the housing promptly broke in half.
I then discovered a layer of corrosion had built up inside the housing until it was gripping the shaft like glue, the corrosion was also so hard you could barely scratch it with a screwdriver.
Has anybody heard of this problem before with these motors, or the other brands that are the same motor? I have four more of these motors on other boats, they are all flushed with fresh water after each use.
Would it be worth pulling the power heads to check this on each motor?
Brian Evans.