I've got an early 1950's Gale Sea King 5HP direct drive that obviously isn't pumping water through the cooling channels (running in a barrel it takes three minutes to get hotter'n a 2 dollar pistol). Powerhead is now off, air blown through the water passage seems fine. I've never been into a lower unit like this before. The crude "water pump" consists of a recpirocating (not rotating) rubber ring on an eccentric hub mouted on the propshaft. The rubber ring has a rectangular protrusion that goes back and forth in a cast channel to create a pumping action. Water is fed into the housing through two holes in the prop hub. A simple (but feeble) water pump. But it's not pumping water. The rubber pump ring thing (I can't call it an impeller) is intact and looks fine but it's not very flexible at all. Is that the likely cause? Is it supposed to be supple rubber, like a new impeller? Or is "hard" normal?
Bizzare little motor. The magnets to run the magneto ignition are not mouted on the flywheel - they're in a circular (solid?) steel piece that's fitted to the crankshaft with a key and rotates INSIDE the coils' radius - not outside. I have no idea how the points work (no cam! no springs! magic!). Dang thing is 55 years old and the coils are perfect. Throws a bright blue spark. 78 lbs compression both holes. I found the rubber rings on eBay for $20 but are there any other likely causes of poor (nonexistant) water circulation in these old motors? Don't ask me to pull the cylinder head and have a look - it's all one piece with the cylinders! No head bolts to corrode that way, I guess.
Bizzare little motor. The magnets to run the magneto ignition are not mouted on the flywheel - they're in a circular (solid?) steel piece that's fitted to the crankshaft with a key and rotates INSIDE the coils' radius - not outside. I have no idea how the points work (no cam! no springs! magic!). Dang thing is 55 years old and the coils are perfect. Throws a bright blue spark. 78 lbs compression both holes. I found the rubber rings on eBay for $20 but are there any other likely causes of poor (nonexistant) water circulation in these old motors? Don't ask me to pull the cylinder head and have a look - it's all one piece with the cylinders! No head bolts to corrode that way, I guess.