This is sort of a carry over from another thread, but after going through a bunch of the motors I have here that came to me through a relatives estate I've been trying to narrow down what to sell as is, whole, and what to part out, and what is just junk.
The motor in question here is an FD11, Johnson 18hp from I believe 1956.
Its got great compression, and spark. (129/131 psi).
It initially didn't have spark but a quick sand and clean of the points got it going.
It will run, but won't idle. I went through the carb, (no parts, just a cleaning), and its no better.
To be fair, it had a tag on it that said 'Needs crank seals" on an ancient manila tag on the tiller.
When cleaning the points I can see one coil is newer than the other, and the older coil is peeling so its not likely going to be around for long.
I pulled the lower and pulled the power head. so that adds a bottom gasket to the list.
Lower unit seal kit
With the lower unit off I pull the prop, which looks new, but I find about 20 yds of fish line wound back into the seal. I check the oil and its low but no water. I drain the lower unit. and figuring that after nearly 70 years its due for a reseal. I open it up and right away notice that the shift lever yoke or fork is twisted, and one pin is missing off one of the arms. The gears are fair but likely okay The pinion gear shows some pitting though. Some gears, new or used would be nice but what's there will likely be fine. If this was a 200hp motor I'd think differently but for a motor that's likely only ever going to putt around on a pond it'll live a long time with the gears its got now. The fork however is toast.
To better describe the motor overall, its a complete, short shaft tiller 1956 short shaft tiller motor.
Somewhere in its past someone decided that it needed to be painted black with a spay bomb.
The good parts about the paint is that it seems to come easy and it likely protected this motor over the years.
There is no salt corrosion and not a single bolt has fought me.
The rubber cover bushings are gone, two have been replaced with pieces of fuel hose an zip ties.
It needs a new set of rubber bushings there too.
So the parts list so far is:
2 coils
2 ign. point sets
2 condensers ( $68 Sierra coils, OEM points/cond. set)
top and bottom crank seals ($26, dealer
bottom power head gasket ($17, dealer)
lower unit shift lever (used only, new NLA, about $40 off fleabay)
lower unit seal kit $31
cowl bushings (make something myself, I don't see new one's listed?)
$182 total plus oil and time.
Add in the time to strip, repaint and re- decal as needed to make it look good again, probably about a day's work and $40 in materials plus decals, which look to be about $80 .
My question is, is it in any way worth fixing this or if not, part it out and sell off the parts? Put the parts on the shelf?
Its not the only motor I've got, I don't need it, and its not really anything that I can use on any of my current boats, all of which are much newer.
To be fair as well I've got a trailer full of motors that mostly all came from the same place, in that lot of motors is also a newer 18hp, with a very similar lower unit on a 1960 Evinrude 18hp. That motor is cleaner in appearance but has only 90/101 psi compression, no spark, and signs of saltwater use.
There's a chance that its lower unit will donate some parts, but the upper parts are mostly different.
I could just reseal that lower and swap it to the '56, but although it'll bolt up it does have some differences and its not as clean having likely seen either outdoor storage or saltwater at some point. The housings on the 56 are cleaner. I would basically be stealing the gears and shift fork from the newer lower.
the question here is that the lower as it sits will no doubt sell for $200 as it sits fairly easily here since it does function has clean oil.
The rest of the motor is probably not worth reviving, although it may run with enough work but I'd call 100 psi well worn compared to the other's I've tested here.
Who would fix the '56 and try to sell it that way?
Or part it out?
Or sell it whole as it sits and let someone who needs worry about fixing it?
The motor in question here is an FD11, Johnson 18hp from I believe 1956.
Its got great compression, and spark. (129/131 psi).
It initially didn't have spark but a quick sand and clean of the points got it going.
It will run, but won't idle. I went through the carb, (no parts, just a cleaning), and its no better.
To be fair, it had a tag on it that said 'Needs crank seals" on an ancient manila tag on the tiller.
When cleaning the points I can see one coil is newer than the other, and the older coil is peeling so its not likely going to be around for long.
I pulled the lower and pulled the power head. so that adds a bottom gasket to the list.
Lower unit seal kit
With the lower unit off I pull the prop, which looks new, but I find about 20 yds of fish line wound back into the seal. I check the oil and its low but no water. I drain the lower unit. and figuring that after nearly 70 years its due for a reseal. I open it up and right away notice that the shift lever yoke or fork is twisted, and one pin is missing off one of the arms. The gears are fair but likely okay The pinion gear shows some pitting though. Some gears, new or used would be nice but what's there will likely be fine. If this was a 200hp motor I'd think differently but for a motor that's likely only ever going to putt around on a pond it'll live a long time with the gears its got now. The fork however is toast.
To better describe the motor overall, its a complete, short shaft tiller 1956 short shaft tiller motor.
Somewhere in its past someone decided that it needed to be painted black with a spay bomb.
The good parts about the paint is that it seems to come easy and it likely protected this motor over the years.
There is no salt corrosion and not a single bolt has fought me.
The rubber cover bushings are gone, two have been replaced with pieces of fuel hose an zip ties.
It needs a new set of rubber bushings there too.
So the parts list so far is:
2 coils
2 ign. point sets
2 condensers ( $68 Sierra coils, OEM points/cond. set)
top and bottom crank seals ($26, dealer
bottom power head gasket ($17, dealer)
lower unit shift lever (used only, new NLA, about $40 off fleabay)
lower unit seal kit $31
cowl bushings (make something myself, I don't see new one's listed?)
$182 total plus oil and time.
Add in the time to strip, repaint and re- decal as needed to make it look good again, probably about a day's work and $40 in materials plus decals, which look to be about $80 .
My question is, is it in any way worth fixing this or if not, part it out and sell off the parts? Put the parts on the shelf?
Its not the only motor I've got, I don't need it, and its not really anything that I can use on any of my current boats, all of which are much newer.
To be fair as well I've got a trailer full of motors that mostly all came from the same place, in that lot of motors is also a newer 18hp, with a very similar lower unit on a 1960 Evinrude 18hp. That motor is cleaner in appearance but has only 90/101 psi compression, no spark, and signs of saltwater use.
There's a chance that its lower unit will donate some parts, but the upper parts are mostly different.
I could just reseal that lower and swap it to the '56, but although it'll bolt up it does have some differences and its not as clean having likely seen either outdoor storage or saltwater at some point. The housings on the 56 are cleaner. I would basically be stealing the gears and shift fork from the newer lower.
the question here is that the lower as it sits will no doubt sell for $200 as it sits fairly easily here since it does function has clean oil.
The rest of the motor is probably not worth reviving, although it may run with enough work but I'd call 100 psi well worn compared to the other's I've tested here.
Who would fix the '56 and try to sell it that way?
Or part it out?
Or sell it whole as it sits and let someone who needs worry about fixing it?
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