Bass Fishing Forum

General Bass Fishing Discussion => Dock Talk => Topic started by: topdsm0138 on August 10, 2024, 08:53:13 AM

Title: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: topdsm0138 on August 10, 2024, 08:53:13 AM
  A fellow soldier asked for my help next weekend. He bought a Gheenoe with a 5hp Mercury outboard. Long story short, he took it out and it came off the back at the local lake. He pinned on his GPS watch where it finally sunk (in 18' of water). Now comes the tricky part, without me diving (not a good swimmer) do you think a gaff treble (the large weighted treble hooks on a rope) would be enough to try and fish it out? It's an aluminum motor, so my fishing magnet won't work.

Tiller Mafia.

Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: D.W. Verts on August 10, 2024, 10:22:30 AM
Man. That could be very tricky... I'd say swallow down and pay a professional diver to do the job.

Dale
Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: big g on August 10, 2024, 01:16:37 PM
Quote from: D.W. Verts on August 10, 2024, 10:22:30 AMMan. That could be very tricky... I'd say swallow down and pay a professional diver to do the job.

Dale


A true diver might like the challenge and do it just for fun!
 
In the 70's we had a friend that had a trailer in the keys.  While sitting out under his chickee hut,he noticed a good size sailboat going bye about a half mile away, and a 15 horse merc dropped off the back end.  The next day he and a friend went out and recovered the motor in 6 feet of water.  He called around to see if anyone reported it missing.  After cleaning it up,  flushing out, it started right up and ran for years after.  Call around to any scuba clubs in the area for possible help.
Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: topdsm0138 on August 10, 2024, 01:46:06 PM
Quote from: big g on August 10, 2024, 01:16:37 PM
Quote from: D.W. Verts on August 10, 2024, 10:22:30 AMMan. That could be very tricky... I'd say swallow down and pay a professional diver to do the job.

Dale


A true diver might like the challenge and do it just for fun!
 
In the 70's we had a friend that had a trailer in the keys.  While sitting out under his chickee hut,he noticed a good size sailboat going bye about a half mile away, and a 15 horse merc dropped off the back end.  The next day he and a friend went out and recovered the motor in 6 feet of water.  He called around to see if anyone reported it missing.  After cleaning it up,  flushing out, it started right up and ran for years after.  Call around to any scuba clubs in the area for possible help.
I can't really swim or I'd dive for it. So best I can do for him is try and pin it with my FF and then "go fishing". Unless he wants to dive down and hook up to it.

Tiller Mafia.

Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: Capt. BassinLou on August 10, 2024, 03:17:19 PM
I'm not recovery expert by any means of the imagination. Maybe a grappling anchor might help. They are heavy enough. If you manage to anchor into the motor. Maybe someone can free dive following the anchor line to the outboard. My question is, is the outboard salvageable being under water for so long?  :surrender:

(https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/slIAAOSwFjpmUixE/s-l1200.jpg)
Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: topdsm0138 on August 10, 2024, 09:45:08 PM
Quote from: Capt. BassinLou on August 10, 2024, 03:17:19 PMI'm not recovery expert by any means of the imagination. Maybe a grappling anchor might help. They are heavy enough. If you manage to anchor into the motor. Maybe someone can free dive following the anchor line to the outboard. My question is, is the outboard salvageable being under water for so long?  :surrender:

(https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/slIAAOSwFjpmUixE/s-l1200.jpg)
That's what I was referring to, toolwise. Some are weighted, some aren't. As for the motor, it's a carburetor, not EFI, so I can disassemble, clean and rebuild it for him.

Fun part: there may or may not be another storm moving in on us next weekend.

Tiller Mafia.

Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: Princeton_Man on August 11, 2024, 06:25:56 AM
Check with you local Fire Department or Sheriff's office. They'll know some water rescue recovery divers who may be able to help.
Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: topdsm0138 on August 16, 2024, 03:32:48 PM
All loaded up and ready for tomorrow morning. Figure I'll be on the water by 8am to beat the Jerk-skis. I'll post up tomorrow with our results or failures. (https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20240816/535e86b18b36d468e5fe8408a0d22776.jpg)

Tiller Mafia.

Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: topdsm0138 on August 17, 2024, 02:18:25 PM
Good news, bad news:

 Bad news is my motor has bad fuel in it, so had nothing but the trolling motor to use. Then a bad storm moved in so our trip was cut short once we did make it out there. We made it back to the ramp by the time the wind picked up and the storm hit.

Good news: We managed to find the motor in 12' of water, resting on its side. We pinned the GPS location of it's resting place right before we had to head back in.

My buddy is going to go back tomorrow and dive for it then bring it to me to rebuild. Being a carburetor, that's a piece of cake for me.

Tiller Mafia.

Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: big g on August 17, 2024, 09:51:37 PM
Good luck guys, stay safe, and let us know how it turns out!
Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: D.W. Verts on August 18, 2024, 09:22:41 AM
You really shouldn't have to do that carb... Pull the plugs. Get everything dried out, flipping the motor over a few times to get it to drain. Crank the motor over a few times, put lube in the cylinders, turn it over a few more times. Put it back together, hook good fuel up to it and see if you can get it to fire. If it doesn't, then surgery may be needed. But I've seen engines fire after being underwater for several YEARS by doing the above. Just saying,

The MAIN THANG is to do it quickly upon retrieval. Waiting is not good at all. Best of luck.

Dale
Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: big g on August 29, 2024, 06:24:35 PM
Is it still under water, or have you recovered it?
Title: Re: Recovering a small outboard motor.
Post by: topdsm0138 on August 29, 2024, 08:46:51 PM
My buddy went back the day after and got it.

Tiller Mafia.