New impeller not pumping water?

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I put a dolph-fin on the motor but will put it into a large plastic tote of water in the morning.
I have been hearing I might be using too much water pressure on the muffs?
It's a quick check anyway.
Where is the schematic with part #114 located?
 
Problem solved!!!

The two sets of muffs in the picture are wasted money or a learning curve.
I put a tote on some 4x4 blocks and it's pumping like a racehorse.
 

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I took the model # off of the tag on the engine and it looks like a 1984 Johnson 35 HP.
J35RLCRR is what I see on the tag.
Now I need to find a manual
And Thank You all for the ideas and suggestions!!!
 
Just read this thread tonight. Glad you got if figured out. It’s cool to see the support on this site. fyi for everyone incase you’re not aware. I live o. The east coast and run my boats in almost exclusively salt water. I have seen out boards “rock up” with salt and debris. So much so I’ve heard of guys taking a torch to the water jacket and tapping with a hammer to break it up! I haven’t done this myself but when I could get one pumping the Suzuki dealer told me he had too. Any way I have cleared out similar blockages with solid wire. Probably cause I run in shallow water to get to some nice fishing holes. Sand and clam shell get sucked right up.
 
I've ran a 1984 35hp Johnson since it was new on my 16ft boat, almost exclusively in salt and brackish water but I do flush the thing out after every trip. What it does see a lot of is sand and debris, but these motors are designed to deal with a good bit of that stuff without issues.
On mine, in a tub of water, I get water out of the tell tale almost instantly, long before the thermostat opens.
I change my thermostat everytime I do an impeller, about every two or three years.
Pulling the power head is a pain on any motor, and its worse on an older motor which will likely have some frozen hardware to deal with. One thing I did to mine when it was new is to pull out every accessible bolt and coat it with Never Seize to be sure I never have an issue.
I also keep a few spare motors around, grabbing them up anytime I find a deal just to have. I picked up a super clean '85 30hp Evinrude just last week off CL for next to nothing. It runs perfect and it came out of PA, a good distance from any saltwater. I'm in the process of going through it now to be sure its ready if the need arises.

As a note, none of the smaller motors work well on the ears like that, they're okay for some larger motors and stern drives but a bucket or barrel is the only right answer for a portable motor.
 
I've ran a 1984 35hp Johnson since it was new on my 16ft boat, almost exclusively in salt and brackish water but I do flush the thing out after every trip. What it does see a lot of is sand and debris, but these motors are designed to deal with a good bit of that stuff without issues.
On mine, in a tub of water, I get water out of the tell tale almost instantly, long before the thermostat opens.
I change my thermostat everytime I do an impeller, about every two or three years.
Pulling the power head is a pain on any motor, and its worse on an older motor which will likely have some frozen hardware to deal with. One thing I did to mine when it was new is to pull out every accessible bolt and coat it with Never Seize to be sure I never have an issue.
I also keep a few spare motors around, grabbing them up anytime I find a deal just to have. I picked up a super clean '85 30hp Evinrude just last week off CL for next to nothing. It runs perfect and it came out of PA, a good distance from any saltwater. I'm in the process of going through it now to be sure its ready if the need arises.

As a note, none of the smaller motors work well on the ears like that, they're okay for some larger motors and stern drives but a bucket or barrel is the only right answer for a portable motor.
AMEN... and "As a note, none of the smaller motors work well on the ears like that, they're okay for some larger motors and stern drives but a bucket or barrel is the only right answer for a portable motor."
that is sooo critical to smaller 2 strokes.... without the back pressure of running in a bucket it's difficult to get the idle right..
 
Those square muffs are for Yamahas. Use the smaller, round muffs for an Evinrude 35. They can work, as you will see in my 2nd video, but not well at all!

That is a GREAT motor, by the way. I ran a 35 for a number of years, and loved it:


Here is when I sold it after upgrading to a 50 HP, and the new owner still loves it. Notice the poor fit of the squre muffs:


Always use fresh fuel, 50:1 mix of Penzoil XLF and a good impeller, and she will run for a very long time.
 
Have to admit I should have caught the issue with the muffs sooner as should at least 2 or 3 others in here. Surprised we did not. The rectangular muffs are pretty much junk compared to the round ones and are notorious for not supplying water. Sorry about that but apparently I skipped over that post.
 

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