FIELD SERVICE NOTES · v0.1 · DRAFT — SAM-FILL ITEMS PENDING 2026.06.05

Harris FloteBote — Johnson 50 HP 2-stroke

Lower-unit gear-oil change, water-pump service, and spring commissioning for Sam's own pontoon. Engine identity verified from model/serial; boat hull model/year still to confirm from registration. This is Sam's boat — not the Lubig Bennington (that customer boat runs a Yamaha F150, not this Johnson).

BOATHarris FloteBote pontoon · exact model/year SAM-FILL
HINHAMP2051E585 (HAMP = Harris MIC)
ENGINEJohnson 50 HP 2-stroke · 20" long shaft
ENGINE MODELJ50VLSIB · S/N G04947141
ENGINE YEAR2001 (model-code SI = 01, OMC "INTRODUCES" cipher)
PARTS FAMILYJohnson/Evinrude 40-50 HP 2-stroke, 1989-2005
GEAR CAPACITY16 oz (2-cyl, 1989+ — chart-confirmed)
OWNER / LOCS. Foran · Commerce Twp, MI · on trailer at sam-home
DO NOW

Annual lower-unit gear-oil change

// Drain, inspect for water/metal, refill bottom-up until it weeps from the top vent

  1. Motor vertical, boat roughly level. Place a drain pan under the lower unit. Have the new lube + two fresh screw gaskets ready before you open anything.
  2. Remove the LOWER (drain/fill) screw first, then the UPPER (vent) screw. Removing the top vent lets it drain fast and fully.
  3. Inspect the old lube as it drains. Milky/coffee-with-cream = water intrusion (suspect seals/prop-shaft seal); metal flakes/paste on the magnetic screw = gear wear. Either one: stop and diagnose before running the engine this season.
  4. Refill from the BOTTOM hole, pumping UP, until clean lube weeps out the TOP vent hole with no air gaps. Capacity is ~16 oz but fill to the vent, not to a number.
  5. Install the TOP vent screw FIRST (new gasket), then quickly install the LOWER screw (new gasket). This traps the fill and prevents air pockets. Wipe down; re-check both screws for weep after a few minutes.
⚠ ACTION ITEM — top/vent screw washer = water-intrusion path
2026-06-03 finding: gear oil changed. The BOTTOM drain screw had its sealing washer (cleaned + reused), but the TOP (vent) screw had NO washer. On these Johnson/Evinrude lower units both screws require a sealing washer — a missing top-screw washer is a water-intrusion path. The drained oil was slightly milky ("a little white") = early-stage water intrusion, and the missing top washer is a plausible source.

Before running the motor much: install a fresh sealing washer on the TOP/vent screw, then re-check the oil for milkiness after the next use. Washer = the Johnson 50 drain/seal gasket in PART 05 (SAM-FILL: confirm the correct washer SIZE for BOTH screws — e.g. the 90430-14M09-type; top vs bottom may differ). Tracked as a maintenance issue.

LOGSERVICE HISTORY / MAINTENANCE LOG

Dated record of work done on this boat

✅ 2026-06-05 — steering SEIZED on launch → RESOLVED (freed + greased)
The Harris launched 2026-06-05 with the steering seized (cable rod frozen in the tilt tube). RESOLVED: Sam freed it by tapping the engine end with a hammer + a block of wood (driving at the rod / drag-link end — NOT forcing the wheel, per the safety DO-NOTs below), then greased it. Steering moves again. Prevention matters: work it lock-to-lock regularly and grease the tilt tube (zerk) so it doesn't re-seize — full investigation + free/replace + prevention in PART 08 — Steering.
⚠ 2026-06-05 — TRAILER: broken bunk, needs repair/replace (tracked)
The boat trailer has a broken bunk (one of the carpeted boards the hull/pontoons rest on). A broken bunk lets the toons load onto an unsupported board — repair or replace before the next load/haul so it doesn't damage the pontoons. Flagged by Sam; tracked as an issue so it isn't forgotten. SAM-FILL: which bunk + board size (e.g. 2x4 / 2x6 length), and which trailer if not Sam's own.
2026-06-03 — spring prep
Launch plan — 2026-06-04, ~7:30-8:00 PM (with Mike Letvin)
// Note (v0.1 — first version)
Initial guide for this entity, scaffolded 2026-06-01 from Sam's verified engine model/serial. Values marked like this are SAM-FILL or unverified and need confirmation (registration for hull model/year; cylinder count for the gear-capacity branch). Gear capacity and water-pump part numbers below ARE cross-checked against the Mastertech Marine OMC charts (see References).

PART 01LOWER-UNIT GEAR-OIL CHANGE

Procedure, capacity, and what the old oil tells you

The lower unit (gearcase) is lubricated separately from the engine. On a 2-stroke outboard the powerhead gets its oil from the fuel mix (TC-W3, 50:1) — that is a different fluid and is NOT what goes in the gearcase. The gearcase takes hypoid gear lube and should be changed annually (and after any submersion or suspected water intrusion).

Capacity

For a Johnson/Evinrude 50 HP 2-stroke, 2-cylinder, 1989 and later, the gearcase capacity is 16 oz (Mastertech OMC gearcase chart). Older units differ (1975-88 = 22 oz; 1971-72 = 26 oz), and the 1995+ 3-cylinder 56 ci "50" variant is 22 oz — so confirm 2-cyl vs 3-cyl if you want the exact number. In practice the fill method makes the number moot: you fill until it overflows the top vent, then plug.

Reading the drained oil

What you seeWhat it meansAction
Clean amber/brown, smoothNormalRefill, run the season
Milky / creamy / coffee-coloredWater in the gearcase (seal failure or loose screw gasket)Pressure/vacuum-test seals before running; re-seal prop shaft / drive shaft as needed
Metal flakes / paste on magnetic screwGear or bearing wearStop; inspect gears before running
FoamyPossible water emulsion or overfill aerationRe-drain, investigate
Always replace both screw gaskets
The fill and vent screws each use a small sealing washer/gasket. Reusing a flattened gasket is the most common cause of a slow water leak into a freshly serviced gearcase. New gaskets are pennies; a water-contaminated gearcase mid-season is not.

PART 02GEAR LUBE: HPF PRO vs 80W-90 GL-5

Both are correct — this is a cost choice, not a spec choice

Last year Sam used Evinrude/Johnson HPF Pro (synthetic, OEM part 778755). That is the premium OEM option and is a fine choice. It is not the only correct choice.

OptionSpecApprox costNotes
Evinrude/Johnson HPF Pro (OEM 778755)Synthetic marine gear lube~$18-25 / qtPremium OEM; what Sam used last year
Marine 80W-90 GL-5 (Quicksilver / Lucas / Sierra)SAE 80W-90, API GL-5 hypoid~$9-13 / qtSpec-equivalent for this 2001 50 HP; ~half the cost
Bottom line
For this engine, a quality marine 80W-90 GL-5 meets the requirement at roughly half the price of HPF Pro. Use whichever Sam prefers — the annual change interval and a complete fill-to-the-vent protect the gearcase far more than the brand on the bottle. Avoid automotive gear oil that isn't marine-rated and never use motor oil or ATF here.

PART 03WATER PUMP / IMPELLER

The right kit for a 2-cyl 50, and why 438597 is the wrong number

The water-pump impeller is the other annual-ish wear item on the lower unit (replace every 1-3 seasons, or immediately if the telltale stream is weak/hot). For the 40-48-50 HP 2-stroke, 1989-2005 family (Sam's engine):

PartNumberFits
Water pump kit (incl. housing)438592 (Mastertech MTM-438592)40-48-50 HP 2-stroke, 1989-2005
Impeller only202840-48-50 HP 2-stroke, 1989-2005
Do NOT use 438597
Part 438597 is the water-pump impeller kit for the 60-75 HP 3-cylinder motors (1979-2003), not the 50 HP 2-cylinder. It will be the wrong size. For Sam's J50, the kit is 438592 / impeller 2028.

PART 04SPRING START

Pre-launch checklist for a stored 2-stroke outboard

  1. Fuel: drain/refresh any old gas; mix fresh fuel at 50:1 TC-W3 (if not oil-injected); check the primer bulb and fuel lines for cracks/soft spots.
  2. Water pump / cooling: on muffs or in a tank, start and confirm a strong telltale ("pee") stream. Weak/no stream = replace impeller (Part 03) before running.
  3. Gear oil: change per Part 01 if not done in the fall; inspect for water.
  4. Spark plugs: inspect/replace. (Old /manage record listed NGK QL78YC / Champion L78YC, gap 0.030" — confirm against the 2001 J50 manual.)
  5. Lube points: grease the prop shaft, steering, tilt/trim per the schedule; check prop for line/damage and re-torque.
  6. Battery + connections: charged, terminals clean/tight; test start.
  7. Safety: verify kill-lanyard, registration current, required safety gear aboard.

PART 05PARTS & FLUIDS (TIERS)

What to buy for the annual service

Tier 1 — Gear-oil change (do now)
Tier 2 — Cooling (strongly recommended if telltale is weak or impeller age unknown)
Tier 3 — As needed (spring tune)
// Gear-oil-only job: lube (~$10-25) + 2 gaskets (~$2) = under $30. Add a water-pump kit (~$25-45) if cooling is due.

PART 06REFERENCES

Specs cross-checked this session

To confirm (SAM-FILL)

Engine documentation (from retired /manage record)

PART 07SPARE PARTS (PRECAUTIONARY)

Throttle-linkage bushing + trim sender — pin exact PNs from the boats.net diagram

Throttle linkage plastic part (brittle — not broken yet, precautionary spare)

A plastic bushing / cable-end in the throttle/shift linkage is brittle; Sam wants one on hand. Pin the EXACT numbered piece from the boats.net OEM Throttle Linkage exploded diagram for J50VLSIB / 2001 50 HP before ordering.

Trim sender — CONFIRMED missing/broken, REPLACE (don't repair)

Sam confirmed this engine HAS power trim (gauge + wiring run), and the trim sender unit is gone/broken (the partial on hand has a broken plastic piece). Replace, don't repair — a trim sender is a precision potentiometer; a glued arm won't read accurately.

Research outcome (2026-06-02): two OEM senders are in play; the exact one for this 2001 J50VLSIB could not be machine-confirmed because every OEM exploded-diagram host (boats.net, marineengine.com, crowleymarine.com) blocks automated reading. Both candidates are characterized below from retailer listings; pin the final number in a browser from the diagram (one-minute check — links at the bottom of this item).

Sources (this section, added 2026-06-02)

PART 08STEERING — SEIZED ON LAUNCH (INVESTIGATION + PROCEDURE)

Isolate the seize → free it with penetrant → realistic cable-replacement outcome

✅ Issue log — 2026-06-05: steering SEIZED on launch → RESOLVED
On launch 2026-06-05 the steering was seized — the wheel would not turn the motor. This is a mechanical cable steering setup (Harris helm + Johnson 50, cable run through the engine's tilt tube). The cause fit this motor's known no-lube / water-intrusion history: the steering cable's stainless inner rod corroded/frozen in the aluminum TILT TUBE — classic galvanic corrosion made worse by sitting without lock-to-lock movement. RESOLVED 2026-06-05: Sam freed it by tapping the engine end with a hammer + a block of wood (at the rod / drag-link end — NOT forcing the wheel), then greased it; steering moves again. Keep it from re-seizing: work it lock-to-lock regularly + grease the tilt tube (the procedure below stays as the reference if it stiffens again, and the prevention step is now the priority). Cross-reference the gear-oil water-intrusion / missing top-screw-washer finding above — same neglect history on the same motor.
⚠ SAFETY — TWO things you must NOT do (each turns a cable job into a cable + helm/tube job)

1. Isolate the seize — is it the cable, or the engine swivel?

Unbolt the steering drag link / Z-bar from the end of the steering rod (the connection at the motor — ~9/16" nut; SAM-FILL: confirm the actual nut size on this helm/link). With the link disconnected, try to move the motor by hand:

2. Confirm the cable is the suspect

With the drag link off, the cable rod (the stainless rod that exits the tilt tube) is the suspect — corroded/frozen inside the aluminum tilt tube. Stainless rod in an aluminum tube + moisture + years without movement is the textbook galvanic seize.

3. Free it — escalating, patience over force

  1. Soak. Flood the rod/tube junction with penetrating oil (PB Blaster / WD-40). Let it sit — hours to a day — then repeat. Penetrant + time does most of the work.
  2. Work it. Put vise grips on the exposed rod and work it up/down while a helper holds light pressure on the wheel, spraying penetrant and working it back and forth. If it starts to move, keep working it lock-to-lock to free it fully.
  3. Repeat — don't muscle it. Repeated soak-and-work beats brute force, and brute force at the wheel breaks the helm (see SAFETY above).

4. Realistic outcome — budget for a cable replacement

A rod seized hard from corrosion often will not fully free. If it won't budge after soaking and working it, the steering cable must be REPLACED — and sometimes the tilt tube too if the rod is frozen solid in it. Plan/budget for a cable replacement as the likely real fix. SAM-FILL: the steering cable spec for the Johnson 50 / Harris helm — measure the existing cable length + confirm the helm type before ordering.

5. Prevention (once it's fixed)

Sources (this section, added 2026-06-05)

Harris FloteBote + Johnson 50 (J50VLSIB / G04947141) · v0.1 draft · Sam's boat · substrate doc, not yet published