Re: Mariner 135-2 dead cylinders
The ignition is all controlled by 2 switch boxes stacked one on top the other on the starboard side of the engine. Each box has 3 ignition circuits in it, 2 charge coil inputs, a kill circuit, and a bias circuit. Timing is by 6 leads from the trigger, and each ignition circuit feeds it's own coil and plug. Charge coils (stator) supply the power, and the bias circuits keep things in sync, and are modified by timing modules and such.
The oil alarm module is hooked to one of the coil primary circuits, and to a pulse maker in the oil pump. If pulses are available at one place, and not the other, the alarm sounds. You can put the switch box lead on any coil wire and check for misfire with your ear. If you move things around on the switch boxes, make sure all the grounds are tight and the mounting screws are tight before you crank. They like to fry with a bad ground.
2 cycle is easier to fix than 4 cycle. It goes squish-bang. If it ran once, has compression, fuel, and spark, it will run. Simple as that.
On the LU. I would run Merc High performance gear lube, not the normal stuff in that engine.
Are the flakes steel or aluminum. Mine had a few al flakes in it. Turned out to be from a wrench monkey forcing bearings and seals in crooked. I noticed excess end play and had a good mech go through it. No major parts, but 'bout 100 in seals and stuff and 300 labor. Steel flakes would be something actually spalling. If it's a few and you're lucky, just a bearing. If you let it go, and flakes get into the gears and cause metal to metal contact, they will spall and catastrophically fail.
I have a 2.4 XR4. It is a unique sounding and strong, swift machine. It was intimidating at first, but after I saw what the wrench monkey did to the lower unit last fall, I took it down to the long block and checked everything out during the winter. If you're patient, and do things the best way instead of the fastest way, it's actually pretty easy to work on.
hope it helps
John