Re: Down under rebuild of 90HP Force
wow, thanx for taking the time to read this thread!!! and first up, best of luck with getting yours going again!! The guys on these forums have been a huge help and I couldnt have done it without them
When I assembled the crank in the block the first time, the bearing wouldn't seat quite right in its case journal. The Clymer manual said to tap it down, and when it seated it didn't make contact with the lower part of the journal. Then I installed the case cover and torqued it, and after that, while tightening the bearing cage, the cage had to push the bearing down into place.
My theory is that the bearing didn't land square in the block, so when the engine ran, it acted like a screw, pushing the crank down out of place. In my case, I think it was extreme enough to cause this at idle. Seems to me in your case, the same thing happened, but less extreme, so it took some higher speed to move the crank.
My theory is different as to why mine failed.
I had no missalignment issues during assembly, I was super vigilant in locating all the bearings on their dowels, both the top and bottom bearings seated perfectly in the case, and upon torquing them up, a small amount of gasket maker (Loctite) oozzed out comfirming they where home.
My crank rotated quite freely aswell, and it shouldnt matter too much whether the case is torqued up or not. The bearings are rolling needles and dont rely on crush , so the whole assembly should feel very much the same whether its torqued up or not.
In your case, your 100%, yours seized due to missalignment and I think you didnt have one of the bearings located properly, thus skewing it all. I paid special attentions to this aspect, tripple checked it and made sure I had a small ooze of gasket maker squeeze out on all edges of the case.
I honestly think I made the mistake when installing my new upper bearing.
I used a piece of pipe over the inner race and a big hammer.
I didnt clean the inside of the pipe and noticed a small amount of scale fall out into the bearing during the hitting. I then used WD40 and compressed air to clean the bearing, it spun smooth, but not perfectly.
Upon assembly, I didnt take much notice of lubricating this bearing, may have got a spalsh, but not much, if any oil.
So hitting it on is not ideal, then cleaning all the oil out off it from when its made ( using WD40),nor is letting it run dry upon startup cos I didnt pack it with grease or oil.
I think the last factor broke the camels back. Its at the top of the motor, and would require some considerable running time before getting 2 stroke mix on it, take note of how close the crank counter weights are to it aswell.
Im not saying the design is good, speaking to guys that play with other outboards are astounded that the whole crank "floats" in the case, they say most others have a retaining plate that bolts the upper bearing into the case much nicer iinstead of the Force clam "shell clamp".
I was super lucky, didnt smash anything and the bearing didnt turn in the case.
I feel if the bore of the case is scored or damaged from the seize, it would struggle to hold the bearing properly ever again.
I suggest you press the new bearing on, use loctite on its journal, and pack it with grease from the top before you put the upper cover on.
Then pay super dfarefull attention during assembly to make sure all bearings are located 100%
Im no expert, but this aspect of my build is goin sweet 5hrs into its new life.
keep us posted!!