Well folks, now that my 1977 40+ Mk II is purring like a big kitten. I've taken on a real humdinger of a new restoration project. I wouldn't need to be restoring it if some morons hadn't left it sitting on the rocks just below the high tide level for three days, but there ya have it; some people are just idiots. A few years ago it was running like it just came from the factory. Two years ago, some work was being done on the boat it was attached to, and to be "helpful" a couple of land lubbers took off the motor and set it on some rocks so the boat could be flipped over and the hull patched. The guy doing the patching didn't notice where they put the motor until a few days later, and by then, the damage was done. What am I talking about you ask? A 1961 Homelite 55 HP 4 cycle outboard. The FIRST factory 4 stroke outboard made. And until that unfortunate incident involving imbeciles; it ran like new. I intend to get it back to that condition as soon as possible! Here's a few shots of the beastie.
"Fortunately" the water never went past the lower carburetor, so none of the electricals were submerged. But the lower carb will absolutely need a rebuild since there is a whole crap-load of salt in it.
Surprisingly I was able to find and download a basic service manual for it. And there is full shop manual available on eBay; which of course I'm going to grab at first opportunity! And while the Homelite 55 doesn't have quite the following that Seagull do, it has it's share of obsessed aficionados who keep stocks of as many parts for the motor as is available today. Of course, I'm hoping I'm not gonna be needing many of those parts, but it's good to know they're out there.
Anyhoo, just thought I'd let ya's in on my new project.
Cheers!
If it's stuck; force it. If it breaks; it needed replacing anyways.