Jacket4life
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2010
- Messages
- 382
I have a 1973 Mercury 500 50 HP outboard motor mounted on a 16' basstracker welded aluminum boat.
I have searched the forum for an answer to this, but didn't come across anything exactly the same.
Problem: Forward and Reverse are backwards. That is to say, when you move the selector forward, the boat goes into reverse, and vice versa. The moter runs excellently, I have full throttle both ways, no other problems.
I have read in a few different places that there is a part in the lower unit that can be installed backward that can cause this. Any confirmation/advice/instruction would be greatly appreciated.
For those who would like to know more:
My father bought this motor originally mounted on a 14' fiberglass narrow hull bass boat (I BELIEVE the brand name was a Bengal?) but it had "stick steer". The boat eventually developed an unstoppable leak, and so he shopped around and bought the basstracker. He and I restored it to a point that were were ready to mount the engine, then took the engine to a marine service outlet. They sold us a used controller (Mercury) and mounted, rigged, and tuned the engine ($600, I felt like that was fair). We retreived the boat, put in, and immediately found this forward/reverse problem. Upon returning, the company wanted $400 to remove the lower unit for a fix, and my dad refused (he felt like that was unfair, and he did not trust their explanation that this was neccessary to fix it). The boat has been like that every since. As I said, it is operable, just a hassle. Now I'd like to sell it, but need to fix this problem, I believe, to maximize my sale. I have checked with several local marine outlets and they vary in their reccomendations (I don't think any of them REALLY know the problem, to be honest), but NONE will give me a flat price, and I am afraid of an "open-ended" deal. I cannot afford them to charge me $500-$1000 to fix it.
For those of you that enjoy laughter at other's expense: I DO know that switching the cables IS NOT the answer, having spent four hours of my life doing that! Could have saved myself a LOT of time by reading ahead and finding out there is a throttle cable and a transmission cable! LOL.
Thanks to everyone for their time, any help is appreciated.
I have searched the forum for an answer to this, but didn't come across anything exactly the same.
Problem: Forward and Reverse are backwards. That is to say, when you move the selector forward, the boat goes into reverse, and vice versa. The moter runs excellently, I have full throttle both ways, no other problems.
I have read in a few different places that there is a part in the lower unit that can be installed backward that can cause this. Any confirmation/advice/instruction would be greatly appreciated.
For those who would like to know more:
My father bought this motor originally mounted on a 14' fiberglass narrow hull bass boat (I BELIEVE the brand name was a Bengal?) but it had "stick steer". The boat eventually developed an unstoppable leak, and so he shopped around and bought the basstracker. He and I restored it to a point that were were ready to mount the engine, then took the engine to a marine service outlet. They sold us a used controller (Mercury) and mounted, rigged, and tuned the engine ($600, I felt like that was fair). We retreived the boat, put in, and immediately found this forward/reverse problem. Upon returning, the company wanted $400 to remove the lower unit for a fix, and my dad refused (he felt like that was unfair, and he did not trust their explanation that this was neccessary to fix it). The boat has been like that every since. As I said, it is operable, just a hassle. Now I'd like to sell it, but need to fix this problem, I believe, to maximize my sale. I have checked with several local marine outlets and they vary in their reccomendations (I don't think any of them REALLY know the problem, to be honest), but NONE will give me a flat price, and I am afraid of an "open-ended" deal. I cannot afford them to charge me $500-$1000 to fix it.
For those of you that enjoy laughter at other's expense: I DO know that switching the cables IS NOT the answer, having spent four hours of my life doing that! Could have saved myself a LOT of time by reading ahead and finding out there is a throttle cable and a transmission cable! LOL.
Thanks to everyone for their time, any help is appreciated.