1962 Mercury 110 9.8hp Outboard Motor

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  • čas přidán 26. 04. 2018
  • One of my auction buys. This one turned out to be a good one after a little work. Very happy with this motor. It's quite enjoyable to run. After further research I have determined this motor is a 1962 model. it was previously listed as a 1960, which is prior to production of the model 110.

Komentáře • 107

  • @GlenB1963
    @GlenB1963 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Its a years older than me, faster, and looks better. Well done Mr Keikafer. Lovely little motor. ❤from Brisbane Queensland Australia 🇦🇺 👍

  • @wallofjars6299
    @wallofjars6299 Před 6 měsíci

    I have one, used it for years when I was a kid,, my son just bought a 12 foot aluminum boat, going to get her working again a relive my childhood,, great times in lake Simcoe.

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 6 měsíci

      Awesome! They're great little motors. Great to hear yours is going to get back on the water. Sharing that with your son will be great. Thanks for watching!

  • @mikestefano7198
    @mikestefano7198 Před 6 lety +1

    This is one of my favorites bring back memories of fishing in Canada

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 6 lety +1

      Mike Stefano I'm quite fond of this one too. This one runs great. My first real outboard that I owned was a 1979 Mercury 9.8. It's the one I ran last 4th of July. This one is a much nicer motor to run and a lot better running motor. The earlier Mercs had great styling. The mid 70s started the black boxes and the styling went away. Thanks for watching.

  • @donaldswider3858
    @donaldswider3858 Před 4 lety +3

    Got a '63 and 2 '67s .......once you got the fever for the old mercs......you can't get rid of it nice motor

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 4 lety +1

      Thank you. It did turn out quite well considering what it was when I started with it. Thanks for watching!

  • @lstucken
    @lstucken Před 3 lety

    We had one just like it and it ran great. Wish I still had it.

  • @keithsk-gaming9820
    @keithsk-gaming9820 Před 5 lety +4

    My opinion is that Motors that are right around 10 horse power are a great size for a rowboat. They don't suck down the fuel and put out plenty of power. I personally have an 8 horsepower Mercury and it runs great on My boat.

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety +2

      I tend to agree with you that the power to portability balance of a 10hp motor is about perfect. My favorite all around motor is the OMC 18hp. They are a little bit thirstier though. Thanks for watching!

    • @keithsk-gaming9820
      @keithsk-gaming9820 Před 5 lety +2

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 any time! I love your videos

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety +1

      @@keithsk-gaming9820 Thank you. I'm glad you enjoy them. 👍

    • @keithsk-gaming9820
      @keithsk-gaming9820 Před 5 lety

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 😁

  • @EricMcNettCorsairMan
    @EricMcNettCorsairMan Před 5 lety +1

    Just picked one of these up and posted a pic of it and a johnson 5.5 i got sunday on the AOMCI facebook, but mines Black and was told it should be white. its all there and i hope it doesnt take much to get it running. yours looks great and i cant wait to get mine home!

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety

      Thanks! I'll check your pics out on the AOMCI Facebook. This one wasn't bad to get running. It has a ton of hours on it and seems to be a little lacking on power. It runs well and does OK for speed once its on plane, but it doesn't have enough to plane the boat off in medium chop. Still, its a cool motor and its a pleasure to run on calm water. Thanks for watching!

    • @EricMcNettCorsairMan
      @EricMcNettCorsairMan Před 5 lety

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 do you or have you had the Lower unit off? im trying to get mine off but cant see how to disconnect the shift linkage as i think thats whats holding me up.

    • @EricMcNettCorsairMan
      @EricMcNettCorsairMan Před 5 lety

      few more videos and i got it off, was just a tough go, now to start the restoration.

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety +1

      @@EricMcNettCorsairMan Glad to hear you got it off. I have had this one off too. By the time I got the first comment you already had the LU off. Good luck with your project and thanks for watching!

    • @EricMcNettCorsairMan
      @EricMcNettCorsairMan Před 5 lety

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 Always! that fleetwin you just posted is a beauty! Wish my 54 was as nice

  • @willcojak9650
    @willcojak9650 Před 4 lety +1

    First boat I ever ran, 9.8 . Back in the 60s I was just a kid.

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 4 lety

      This one has had the crap ran out of it. With a little TLC though, she came back to life and runs nicely again. I don't think it has the power it once had, but still isn't bad and it sounds great when its wound up. Thanks for watching!

  • @markexline1998
    @markexline1998 Před 5 lety

    My pops has the same model and year bought it new we use it in a 12 foot V bottom on the big river in hillsboro Missouri. Pushes the boat nicely

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety +1

      Yes, it's a nice little motor. It will definitely push a 12 foot tinny along nicely. This one still dies pretty well and it has lots and lots of hours on it. Thanks for watching!

    • @markexline1998
      @markexline1998 Před 5 lety

      Also we have a '35 Neptune that was my grandfather's still running

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety

      @@markexline1998 Excellent! That's great! I have a Neptune that I need to get to work on one of these days too.

  • @davidelton8860
    @davidelton8860 Před 6 lety +3

    Oh the sound of an old Mercury..:) :) I grew up on these in the 60's and 70's....brings back many happy memories!! :)

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 6 lety +5

      David Elton I do like the sound of these. I have a couple of 70s Mercs, but this one sounds the best. Also have some 50s Mercs, but I still need to work on those. This turned out to be a nice runner after a little work. A little more cleaning and it will be a good one. Thanks for watching!

    • @davidelton8860
      @davidelton8860 Před 6 lety +4

      :) I have a 1976 7.5 Merc that my parents purchased new in Port Washington Wis. "He" and I spent many summers hours cruising on a Lake in northern Wisconsin on our vacations:) Still looks brand new..I'm keeping him out of service..a "keepsake" if you will. Our larger boat had a 1974 50hp Merc on it....I still shed a tear when I see one of those anywhere...many happy memories :) In later years, I had a 1977 85 hp Merc....a "brute" lol :) Currently, I also have a 1971 7.5 Merc..needs some fuel line and carb work which I hope to get too this summer, and of course my sweet 1961 10 hp Johnson :)

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 6 lety +3

      David Elton I have a nice 1975 Mercury 7.5 go that I'll have to make a video of. Maybe this year. A least it was side before it crashed to the floor on its back and cracked the cover and the lower pan. I still she's a tear when I think of how nice it was before that happened.😢 Still a great runner. You should run your 7.5 every once in a while just to enjoy it. It wants to get out and push you around in a boat again just as much as you want to ride along.😉

    • @richardgrayson3463
      @richardgrayson3463 Před 3 lety +1

      Me too.Going to start looking to see if I can’t find one somewhere for sale.
      I’ll never forget as a little kid in the early 70s ,dad letting me operate it,the ole Ekaufer Merc.,love that sound!,it’s unmistakable and irreplaceable.
      Like the sound of the old Boeing 707 engines my dad worked on during his 37 years at American Airlines main maintenance hub in Tulsa,the sound of both being back so many great memories. Thank you so much for posting this!

  • @fleetwin1
    @fleetwin1 Před 6 lety +2

    Cool, I was afraid the little Merc was gonna run circles around the OMC 10hps, but seems to run about the same speed! Don't paint it, just clean it up and enjoy it....

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 6 lety +1

      kramden Yes they are very close to each other in performance. This one runs really nicely and is a better performer than my 1979 model. A good solid OMC 10 seems to have just a little more go in it than one of these but they are very close. I will most likely just clean this one up good and enjoy it as you said. I don't paint them very often. Thanks for watching Don!

  • @RichieRouge206
    @RichieRouge206 Před 5 lety +1

    Lovely. I’d definitely repaint it - a little too much patenia for an oldie lol

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety

      Maybe someday I will. It is a little bit rough around the edges and has a ton of hours on it. Still runs well though. Thanks for watching.

  • @joeblo4306
    @joeblo4306 Před 5 lety

    Hi there! So I’ve got one of these and it’s little brother... the 6. I’ve also got an old Mark 10 that I’m working on. All three of them sometimes have a tough time deciding between running on 1 or both cylinders, especially the 6 and mark 10. Do you know what could cause this? I’ve changed the plugs in the 6 but they seem to darken up really fast when I run at full throttle. Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks, Matt

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety

      If it is sporadically dropping a cylinder, it could be the plug wires, dirty points, or bad condenser(s) as well as the spark plugs. Check those and see if any of those things help keep it running. This one needed the points cleaned a bit, but after that it had good spark on both cylinders. Thanks for watching!

  • @dennismariner4897
    @dennismariner4897 Před 5 lety +1

    I bought mine at a garage sale Cheap ! Wanted $150 for Motor -original tank and hose and heavy made aluminum motor Stand , he took $120 for it Rope was half way pulled out and I managed to fix it and I pulled plugs ,cleaned them and sprayed Seafoam top end fluid inside and I managed to start it up 2nd pull Still need to replace impeller though I'm thinking? Not Sure if it has adequate amount of water flow with the One in it now ?

  • @jaguarguy01
    @jaguarguy01 Před 4 lety

    Picked up the same motor from a friend and the lower unit was picked apart. Any ideas on what other years and model merc lower units will fit it?

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 4 lety

      I have a much smaller base if knowledge about Mercury outboards than I do OMC. I have a 1979 Merc 9.8 also and the lower units are very similar other than the color. I cannot guarantee they will interchange, but it seems like they would. The 70s 7.5 Mercs will interchange with the same year 9.8 also. I'm thinking this is a pretty common lower among this size Mercury. Thanks for watching!

  • @danielsvensson356
    @danielsvensson356 Před 3 lety

    Good old engine you got there. Does your propeller have 2 or 3 bades?Did they have both 2 and 3 blade propellers?I have a 62 110 9.8 twin as well. My 62 has 2 propeller blades. Is there any chance to go on a 3 blade propeller for these older models?

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 2 lety +1

      Sorry for the long delay. This motor has a 2-blade prop. I'm not sure if this one has a 3-blade available or not. They did change the spline count on the prop shaft somewhere along the way. I have a '79 110 with a 3-blade and the props do not interchange. Thanks for watching!

  • @bradtocher8818
    @bradtocher8818 Před 3 lety

    Cool video. I just picked up one of these and would appreciate some guidance. What's the fuel oil mix on these 50:1? What plugs are you running too? I got it with J8C Champions (very old)

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 3 lety

      Congratulations on your motor. I would suggest cleaning the points, checking out the fuel lines, cleaning the carburetor, replacing the water pump impeller and gear oil as a starting point. The spark plugs may need to be replaced as well. I'm pretty sure I am running Champion J6C plugs in mine. I don't think you need to run as hot of a plug as the J8C unless most of.your time is spent trolling. I'm not sure what the factory reccomended plug for this motor is. These motors are OK to run on 50:1, but 24:1 was the ratio when they were built. Mercury did post a service bulletin once they introduced their own oil stating 50:1 could be used (if using the Mercury oil) in all of their motors since they are "fully jeweled" meaning they are full roller bearing engines. Any TCW-3 rated oil today is sufficient to run these at 50:1. Thanks for watching!

    • @bradtocher8818
      @bradtocher8818 Před 3 lety

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 Thanks that is really helpful info.

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 3 lety

      @@bradtocher8818 You're welcome.
      🙂👍

  • @raoulsylvain3008
    @raoulsylvain3008 Před 2 lety +1

    Mercury sound of Power

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 2 lety +1

      This little Merc does sound excellent. I love the sound of it. It has a LOT of hours on it, but it still runs nicely. I need to get it out and run it again. Thanks for watching!!

    • @raoulsylvain3008
      @raoulsylvain3008 Před 2 lety +1

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 my Father had a 200 Mercury 20hp

  • @joeblo4306
    @joeblo4306 Před 5 lety

    Hi there! I bought one of these a few weeks ago (I think it might be a 1961) and it has no spark but the coils are riveted onto the stator. Was yours like that? Also if i was to change them how would I do that? Thanks, Matt

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety

      I don't remember now if these coils are riveted or not. I would not be surprised if they are. The laminations on these were machined to fit the flywheel contour after they were mounted to the plate. Are your coils cracked or otherwise obviously damaged? Have you cleaned and readjusted the points? You may also have bad condensers. Unless the coils are visually damaged there is a good chance they are still OK. I would have to get mine apart again to comment on ow you would change your coils if you needed to do that.

    • @joeblo4306
      @joeblo4306 Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks for the info! I just tested them with a multimeter today and they both check out. No they aren't damaged, in fact they look like they're in good shape but I think you're right it may be a points/condenser issue. I have done a little cleaning on the points but they will need to be adjusted for sure. Thanks again, Matt @@oldjohnnyrude8404

  • @TheSturgisStudioz
    @TheSturgisStudioz Před 4 lety

    I have the same motor. A 1962. I'm having issues with it surging. It ran fine. But now it lost half power. I had only changed the fuel and length of fuel line. 10 ft was too long to hold a siphon. And not sure if I can run ethanol fuel... those changes led to it Won't even wake out or push just a air trail under the water. Idles fine, but when applying throttle it bogs out. I'm Wondering good things to check? Thanks because I'm not very smart with outboards.
    Also does this particular motor need a pressurized fuel tank or just a prime bulb tank. And does it need "no ethanol" gas 91, or can it run plain old unleaded with the mix. Im gonna try soo. Just a mix with regular unleaded and see if it acts normal again. Also I did change spark plugs. But any info would be highly appreciated

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 4 lety +1

      I would recommend staying with non-ethanol fuel in any of these older outboards. The lines and pump diaphragms were not designed to handle the ethanol in the gasoline. Ethanol also phase separates when it encounters enough moisture, which happens more quickly in a marine environment. The phase separation is a corrosive solution that adversely affects carburetors.
      The loss of power may be a plugged carburetor or it may have dropped or is intermittently dropping a cylinder. These things will run surprisingly well at low speed on one cylinder. I hope that helps. Thanks for watching!

    • @chrisambrose8838
      @chrisambrose8838 Před 3 lety +1

      TheSturgisStudioz I have a 1964 9.8 and it did the same thing....take the carb apart and clean it good...get all the passages open and she’ll run great. You may have to open the idle screw if it Boggs down when you start out.

  • @identitystolenwhitewashed5071

    That thing purrs .

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you. It really did turn out to be a nice runner. It has definitely got some time on it. Whoever owned it was not afraid to use it. After a little love it still runs great though. Thanks for watching!

  • @ElGuero227
    @ElGuero227 Před 3 lety

    I have the exact same motor, just pulled it out of a 10 year storage. It needs a little love but I literally cannot find parts anywhere, where did you get all yours?

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 3 lety +1

      The only part I needed was a new impeller. Other than that, I just cleaned up what was there and made new gaskets for the carburetor. Try Marineengine.com for parts. They have a pretty nice website and a good supply of parts. Thanks for watching!

  • @finnbird-tw6rs
    @finnbird-tw6rs Před 3 měsíci

    I just bought the same motor… last owner lost the impeller key, and I can’t find a picture of it anywhere since I’ve been trying to create my own impeller key for it. Just curious if you have any idea what it looks like?

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 3 měsíci

      Congratulations on your motor. If I remember correctly, the impeller key for this motor is just a piece of round rod maybe ~3/32" in diameter the length of the flat onnthe drive shaft. The rod just sits on the flat parallel with the drive shaft and the groove in the impeller fits over that little rod. It allows some radial slop, but it will drive the impeller reliably. I use a dab of grease or Vaseline to hold the rod on the flat while I place the impeller over it. I hope that helps. Thanks for watching!

  • @ronb7776
    @ronb7776 Před 4 lety

    I have the exact same motor. I am trying to getting running again after 41 years in storage. It starts but won't keeping running. I have some questions I would like to ask you. Do you have some way I can contact you you?

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 4 lety

      Great little motor. It will likely need a complete service after sitting for that long. At very least a thorough cleaning of the carburetor and the points will need to be cleaned and adjusted. If it starts but won't stay running, the fuel pump may have failed. The carburetor may also be partially clogged.
      Thanks for watching!

  • @kornelsafran2601
    @kornelsafran2601 Před 6 lety

    Thats amazing, 58 years motor. Is insane. :-)

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 6 lety +1

      Kornél Sáfrán Thank you. Thus one turned out to be a good one. Very enjoyable to run. Thanks for watching!

  • @dennismariner4897
    @dennismariner4897 Před 5 lety

    I bought a 1960 I believe it is Merc 100 Would you happen to know where the Impeller is on this Motor by chance , I've replaced one on Johnson 60 hp on lower unit Was just wondering if it's pretty much same area or up higher in motor ? Thanks

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety +1

      I believe the pump in a Merc 100 is farther up the leg and is a cartridge that has to be removed to get to the impeller. I have never worked on one of those motors. I'm not sure of the proper procedure to replace that impeller. They are fairly probe to failure if they have been sitting a long time though. The impellers are fairly small and do not do well with sitting for extended periods of time. It probably does need to be replaced. I'm sure there are lots of people thaybcan help you with this on AOMCI.ORG as well as johnsoldmercurysite.com. This motor has the pump housing right above the gearcase on the lower unit. It is fairly simple to change. Thanks for watching!

    • @dennismariner4897
      @dennismariner4897 Před 5 lety +1

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 ,Thanks for the fast response 😊, much appreciated . Yeah I kinda thought it may be further up on this Motor It's also suppose to have an automatic type transmission if I'm not mistaken from what I read that can make this Motor a Bit of a challenge Working on ,but watch enough Google/ U-Tube vids on it make it a Lil simpler There is a video on a guy changing impeller on I believe a 1958-59 Merc 15hp same way impeller up inside instead of lower unit But yep thanks for replying so fast !😊

    • @dennismariner4897
      @dennismariner4897 Před 5 lety

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 ,yeah I'm also in process of picking up a Merc 950ss I believe is a 1967 Very Clean Motor said it was out of water tested and was GOOD been like 10yrs in storage though Very Clean under the cabinet though suppose to have very Lil use from what the elderly gentlemen told me

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety +1

      @@dennismariner4897 That should be a really nice motor if it low hours and has been properly stored and looks clean. If it is a runner already, that's great. Hopefully just a tune-up, impeller, and gearcase lube and it's good to go. Watch the wiring on those old Mercs. It is notorious for deteriorating insulation.

  • @nicolascolby7892
    @nicolascolby7892 Před 9 měsíci

    How is your fuel line set up

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 9 měsíci

      During this video, this motor was running from a 4 gallon OMC 2-line pressure tank. I had an adapter on the tank line to change ot to a single line OMC connector then a second adapter to go from.the single line OMC connector to the small Mercury bayonet connector to hook up to the motor. I have a box of adapters I have put together to be able to run lots of various makes of motors from OMC single line tanks and then the adapter to run single lone OMC from the 2-line tank so I can run anything I own from a 2-line OMC tank. Thanks for watching!

  • @74nova36
    @74nova36 Před 2 lety

    Hey bro!
    Ended up scoring a 1968 Mercury 110 9.8 twin for $100. The lower unit is already off but 103 compression in each cylinder and firing in time so not sure what I can do but replace the fuel pump and clean the carb.
    We were talking about a jubilee evinrude but I wanted a 10hp short shaft. Didn’t expect to love this old motor so much but it’s badass. I have a short of it on my page.
    Thanks for all your help, if you can link me to any carb videos for it that would be helpful.

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 2 lety +1

      That's great. They're nice little motors. Some things are a bit different and maybe not quite as straightforward as OMC, but these aren't too strange and a really good runners. I don't have any videos on this carburetor. Again, not too complicated either as carbs go. I should dig this one out and take it for a run again.

    • @74nova36
      @74nova36 Před 2 lety

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 better yet I’m wondering how to find a diagram of the lower unit to make sure I assemble it with all its missing pieces. I know there’s 2 nuts that are missing to hold the impeller body on but I know there’s got to be seals and stuff no longer with it as it’s dry and on my work bench
      Mercury 110 9.8 twin
      Serial No. 2391688

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 2 lety +1

      @@74nova36 Check this link. There are two pages of gear housing diagram with parts lists. www.marineengine.com/parts/mercury-outboard-parts/110/1865779-thru-2798056/gear-housing-assembly-complete

    • @74nova36
      @74nova36 Před 2 lety

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 no luck on Crowley for the 1968 diagrams unfortunately. I think I found a ‘76 diagram that looks dang close. I just feel like I’m missing rubber seals and stuff

    • @74nova36
      @74nova36 Před 2 lety

      @@oldjohnnyrude8404 thank you sir. I was afraid this is the best images I would find.
      I assume the paper manual on OldMerc might have some closer shots and order and methods of assembly? Or will it be the same black and white photo Exploded parts diagrams?

  • @slanier8730
    @slanier8730 Před 4 lety

    Where did you get your impeller at?

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 4 lety

      I purchased my new impeller for this motor from Marineengine.com. There are several online sources as well as your local Mercury dealer. Thanks for watching.

    • @slanier8730
      @slanier8730 Před 4 lety

      Do you happen to have the part number still?

  • @robertt65250
    @robertt65250 Před 2 lety +1

    I"ve got one like it. an it looks like it was not used very much at all. given to me about30 years ago.never had a boat to put it on.

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 2 lety

      Sounds like you need to look for a boat. Nice little motors. Thanks for watching!

  • @Tregaskis47
    @Tregaskis47 Před 3 lety

    Actually the Merc 110 was first sold as a 1962 model....62 and 63 were white. 1960 and 61 still were the automatic transmission 10hp Merc 100's.

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 3 lety

      Yes, you are correct. I should probably change the title of this video. From what I can tell from the serial number this one is a '62 after doing some more digging. Thanks for watching!

  • @mercuryoutboardguy1939
    @mercuryoutboardguy1939 Před 5 lety +2

    Nice “Keep your prop out of the mud” just like AvE 😅

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 5 lety

      His tag line is a LITTLE different than mine, but I had to have something. Keep your stick on the ice.😉

    • @johncarlberg4481
      @johncarlberg4481 Před 3 lety

      Keep ur dock out the ice

  • @finnbird-tw6rs
    @finnbird-tw6rs Před 3 měsíci

    I just bought the same motor… last owner lost the impeller key, and I can’t find a picture of it anywhere since I’ve been trying to create my own impeller key for it. Just curious if you have any idea what it looks like?

    • @oldjohnnyrude8404
      @oldjohnnyrude8404  Před 2 měsíci

      I made an attempt to answer your question over a week ago and apparently CZcams didn't publish it for whatever reason. In any case, congratulations on your motor. If I remember correctly, the impeller drive key for this motor is just a short piece of round steel or a dowel that rests on its side against the flat that is machined into the drive shaft. I use a but of Vaseline or grease to hold the round "key" in place on the drive shaft while the impeller is placed over it. The rod does roll a little and allows some movement of the impeller but keeps it from freely rotating independently of the drive shaft. I hope that makes sense. Thanks for watching!