1995 johnson/evinrude 60 or 70 hp

temang

Recruit
Joined
May 29, 2009
Messages
1
I may get a chance to buy a used boat & motor pkg but will have only a short time to decide.
It comes with a 1995 60 or 70hp Johnson or Evinrude. Does anyone have any comments or views on this generation of motor?. Am I looking for trouble with this or is it a reliable outboard? Any input would help!
 

tashasdaddy

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
Nov 11, 2005
Messages
51,019
Re: 1995 johnson/evinrude 60 or 70 hp

reliable if maintained.
Buying a boat

1st you need to decide what you want to use it for, fishing, cruising, or water sports.

2nd how many people adults, children you want on board of the average outing.

3rd outboard, inboard-outboard, or inboard power plant.

4th Budget, what you want to pay, and what you are willing to pay, when you find
Exactly what you want.

You can hire a marine surveyor, to inspect the boat, or you can do it yourself.

You are mainly looking for soft spots in the deck, transom, cracks, all signs of a rotten, under frame. You walk all over the deck, that a mallot, or hammer with wooden handle, using handle, tap all over the transom, a shape rap is good solid base, a thud, is questionable base.

The motor should be clean, no spots where the paint is discolored, or pealing from heat, having run hot. (This part for outboard motors Compression should be atleast 100psi, and within 10% of each other,)
Spark on all cylinders, good pee stream, check lower unit for water in oil.

The overall condition of the boat will tell you a lot, as to how it has been maintained.
boat motor combo, A 30 year old may be in better condition, than a 3 year old.
 

jtexas

Fleet Admiral
Joined
Oct 13, 2003
Messages
8,646
Re: 1995 johnson/evinrude 60 or 70 hp

Good motors easy enough to work on, parts readily available. If it has good compression, starts easily (warm and cold), idles for a long time without complaining, accelerates and cruises smoothly, then no worries.

Ask the owner to start the motor for you. If he does so without supplying water to the lower unit, walk away -- he probably hasn't taken care of the motor (half a minute dry running will damage the water pump).

If you live in a jurisdiction that titles boats & motors (my state has separate titles for outboards), and the seller doesn't have/can't get clear title, walk away -- a bill of sale isn't good enough.
 
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