Re: New to boats
Are you saying you just acquired this boat? You haven't heard it run or know if it runs? When it was last run? Is there oil in the engine? Pull the dip stick to check. Is it clean, is it milky looking, is it rusty, etc. Give us some clues. But assuming the answer to all of those is really I that you "have no clue" about the condition, then here is the plan:
1) Charge the battery and have it load tested at any auto store. Good = great. Bad = replace it.
2) Change the engine oil and filter
3) Remove the spark plugs and check them. If rusty looking, the engine had water in it which is a bad thing.
4) Disconnect the coil wire (the big one at the distributor cap.
5) Turn the key to START to see if the engine turns cranks (it won't start because the coil wire is disconnected). If it does crank thats a good thing. If all you get is a click or no sound whatsoever you can start chasing electrical problems If there is a rather solid clunk when the starter engages but the engine doesn't crank, try turning it by hand. If no luck with that, the engine is either seized or the drive is seized. Remove the drive then try. If engine spins, drive is locked up. If it still doesn't spin the engine is locked up. Time for a rebuild.
6) If the engine cranks, do a compression test. Should have even compression across all cylinders.
7) Install new points (set the gap with feeler gauge or dwell meter), condenser, distributor cap and rotor for sure and plug wires if necessary
8) Install the plugs, add some fresh fuel, connect the muffs, turn on the water and see if it fires. Don't be surprised to need a carburetor rebuild. Best to just rebuild it since you know nothing about it.
9) You really do need that manual. With a serial number you might find the manual(s) you need on-line and can download them.
This is a starting point. Wiring and other mechanical stuff will certainly need attention like hoses and belts but don't replace any of that stuff until you know you have a sound engine/drive.