Re: trying to open crank case on force 125
Water contamination will eventually cause a bearing failure, however after looking at you scenario, I don't think this is the cause in your case.
The head gasket failure may be the clue in your case. You mentioned in one of your earlier posts that you took one of the spark plugs out and a significant amount of clear water came out. BINGO! If too much water gets into the cylinder, it actually takes up some of the dead space in the cylinder when the piston is trying to compress the air/fuel mixture. Air/fuel mixture is easy to compress. Water does not compress as easily. I suspect that what you have here is known as hydroloc. The piston cannot physically compress the water. Something has to "give". Depending on how much pressure is generated, you can end up with bent connecting rods, blown head gaskets etc. In your case, it probably damaged the wrist pin bearings (as well as the head gasket).
At this point, I wouldn't worry too much about pin-pointing the exact cause, but inspect the remaining engine components very carefully. Look for discoloration on all the bearings and corresponding crankshaft journals. I know it's almost impossible to inspect the wrist pin bearings in other pistons without taking them apart. Since there is no sign of damage to those cylinders, I would assume they're probably OK. I would take a very close look at the rod on the failed cylinder. Inspect the surface of the small end of the rod where the wrist pin bearing ride. Any surface imperfection or pitting is not acceptable and the rod should be replaced. Also make sure it's not bent. I would have a machine shop check it out to be sure.
If the other cylinders are OK, then I wouldn't do anything with them. This is a personal decision based on cost verses results. Piston, ring, and wrist pin are about $80 a set. Rings by themselves are about $25 a set. When it comes to these 2 stoke outboards, the old saying "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" rings true. I've been bitten several times trying to be overly cautious. But then again, that just my experience and by no means applicable in all cases.