Re: 70 HP evinrude starter problem
Just to pile on what Joe, JR & the others are saying...
For some reason, the starting circuit connections on outboards (and maybe it's just OMCs) have to be particularly good - meaning clean & tight. The solenoids are also a trouble spot, in my experience.
I've picked up three damned good outboards over the years, because the owners got low compression results due to poor connections, or a dirty (internally) solenoid.
One was on a beautiful 19' GradyWhite - about the first big boat I owned. Got it for a song because the guy (& I) thought the motor was blown.
The second was a mint 88SPL a few years later. Guy thought the compression was low, but it was just a dirty solenoid. Turned out to be a great motor - we kept it & used it for a long time. BTW, when I sold it, the guy & his kid who bought it put it (successfully) in the back seat of a Dodge Neon!
As I understood the matter more clearly, my conscience got the better of my avarice & I stopped buying motors that way. My last encounter with it was when I sold (cheaply) an old, but healthy, 50hp twin. The next year, the guy showed up in my yard, unannounced, towing his boat. He'd bought a brand new OMC starter for it, and I think a solenoid, and just couldn't get the thing to crank. I fixed his klutzy connections he'd made to his battery (the problem) and showed him that now the rig cranked fine. Without being sarcastic or anything but sympathetic, I mentioned that he probably didn't need to have purchased the expensive new starter & solenoid. Ungrateful moron proceeds to do a 3pt turn on my lawn, then gasses it, laying down two trenches. BTW, he's the building inspector of one of the toniest suburbs in CT; bet he's a peach to deal with.
Anyway, if I've bored you, it's just to illustrate the matter - those connections have to be good & solid. You can see that from how well the rig cranks when you direct connect the starter to the battery. Good luck!