You could check if the Mercury-switch is still good by soldering a new wire on & check for continuity by tilting it (bench-testing is easier)
(2) You can hook a fuel hose with primer bulb directly to that & just drop the other end in a fuel jug (jerry can)
You have not mention the serial# so it hard to pin point the exact engine you have, here is link to diagnose the ignition for what ever version you have
Procedures for testing Mercury Mariner outboard motors.
www.outboardignition.com
yup thanks, i'll check the mercury switch last as that's the least important for now, probably easiest way is unscrew it and aligator clip the terminals to a multimeter?
would I need to connect a check valve for the fuel tank or that could be skipped for now?
just tested the stator, red blue wire / within specs
checked the trigger, within specs
one coil is within spec 900 ohms, but the other coil is 5000 ohms which isn't, but the connections inside the coil to the bad one seems charred, although I doubt cleaning it will help
from my understanding I can't check the switch
also I can't find the spec for the yellow/yellow wiring for the stator
but the wires for the stator are shot anyway, to sell this engine to anybody as a working unit I will probably want to have to replace at least the stator, found one local one for about $300
will try to pull the flywheel when I have chance, I've already marked them, will have a close look at the stator to see if I could get right to the windings to solder new wires, never took one apart before, but if I could bandaid fix it, at least I could confirm how much parts I need to get it working if it's worthwhile
oh yea, I'll try to find the serial number too