guy48065
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2008
- Messages
- 568
In the past on this forum I asked some questions about the care & feeding of Eska & similar lightweight air-cooled outboards & often got the response "they're junk--get an old johnny-rude". Well the beat-up old Sears is still humming and I've just been given a very nice, very old Seahorse TD 15. This has been stored in a basement untouched for 20 years and likely much longer since it's been in water. It still wears about 98% of the original paint--even the prop only has paint rubbed off the very edge.
Anyways--is this possibly TOO old to be considered a good candidate to replace my fishing motor? They're both 5-ish HP but the Johnson weighs much more so it'll be lots more effort carrying it the block from the dock to my cabin.
Some typical questions:
Can I safely run this 50:1 on synthetic? I don't want the hairy eyeball from neighbors for too much smoke or oil slick.
Will I find it hard to find common parts like a carb kit, impeller & points for this antique?
I searched for manuals and found them very expensive--how necessary? Is there an online version with the basics to adjusting one of these? I'm unfamiliar with the controls on this one. (For instance the "Starting" sticker mentions adjusting both needles but I see only one)
It appears there's no telltale on this outboard so should I replace the impeller and just trust the flow or was there some other way of knowing back then?
Any other tips on care & use of an antique outboard?
Any advice for this relative newb would be very appreciated. Thanks.
Anyways--is this possibly TOO old to be considered a good candidate to replace my fishing motor? They're both 5-ish HP but the Johnson weighs much more so it'll be lots more effort carrying it the block from the dock to my cabin.
Some typical questions:
Can I safely run this 50:1 on synthetic? I don't want the hairy eyeball from neighbors for too much smoke or oil slick.
Will I find it hard to find common parts like a carb kit, impeller & points for this antique?
I searched for manuals and found them very expensive--how necessary? Is there an online version with the basics to adjusting one of these? I'm unfamiliar with the controls on this one. (For instance the "Starting" sticker mentions adjusting both needles but I see only one)
It appears there's no telltale on this outboard so should I replace the impeller and just trust the flow or was there some other way of knowing back then?
Any other tips on care & use of an antique outboard?
Any advice for this relative newb would be very appreciated. Thanks.