Re: 1957 Johnson 7.5 hp problems and maintenance
First, welcome to Iboats, Alex!<br /><br />Although I'm not exactly sure what you mean by 'locks up', I'm thinking your problem is probably a simple fix.<br /><br />First, make sure your compression is good. If it's not then unless you enjoy restoring old engines, it's not worth it. Get/borrow a compression gauge, and check both cylinders. You'll probably need to give it a couple pulls before the guage 'tops out'. Report what you find here. Good is ~90psi+, but far more important is that there be no more than 10% variation between the cylinders. <br /><br />Sometimes badly carboned up engines test bad, and decarbing helps restore them. If you've been running 10w30 rather than TCW-3 through the outboard, that's a really good possibility.<br /><br />If you've got good compression, then fixing the engine should be pretty painless. It's either fuel or ignition. <br /><br />Ignition coils go bad on these old outboards - they dry out and one cracks, leaving you running on one cylinder. If pulling one sparkplug lead (not with bare hands!) has no effect on how the engine runs at throttle, you've found your bad coil. Checking spark is sometimes misleading: I've had ones that produce beautiful looking sparks at idle, but at higher rpms the coils arc over internaly (rather than at the plug). New coils are cheap and available.<br /><br />The other likely possibility is that there's crud in the carburator clogging a jet. Generally, you pick up a carb kit which has new gaskets, etc, then you disassemble, clean, and reassemble the carb. Usually you clean the carburator by soaking the metal parts in carb cleaner.<br /><br />All these procedures are covered in the service manual, and you should obtain one and read it before trying to clean your carburator or replace an ignition coil. You can get excellent aftermarket ones from Iboats (I recomend the Seloc for your vintage). Your local library might have one to lend too. <br /><br />Good luck!