An outboard motor is the beating heart of your boat — whether it’s pushing a tinnie down the Murray or powering a runabout off the Gold Coast, it’s the grunt that gets you going. Buying used can save you a bundle, but it’s a bit like picking a second – hand ute — you’ve got to kick the tyres and peek under the hood to avoid a lemon. In Australia, where salt, sun, and hard yakka take their toll, a dodgy outboard can turn your dream day on the water into a nightmare tow home. At www.runboats.com.au, we’re here to help you snag a ripper deal without getting stung, so let’s dive into what to check before you hand over your cash.

Why Buy Used?

New outboards — think Yamaha, Mercury, or Suzuki — start at $2,000 for a 5hp and climb to $30,000 for a 200hp beast. Used? You might score a 20hp gem for $1,000 or a 50hp workhorse for $5,000. It’s a budget – friendly way to get on the water, especially if you’re pairing it with a boat from our listings. But cheap comes with a catch — wear, tear, and the odd tall tale from a seller. A thorough check keeps you from buying a dud that’s one sputter away from the scrap heap.

1. Visual Inspection: Eyes On, Hands On

Start with a good squiz — looks can tell you plenty.

  • Rust and Corrosion: Salt’s a killer in Australia — check the casing, prop, and bolts for rust. A bit of surface stuff’s normal; crusty, flaking metal screams neglect. Coastal motors cop it worse — freshwater use is a bonus.
  • Cracks or Dents: Scan the lower unit and skeg (the fin below the prop). Bumps mean it’s hit rocks or sandbars — could spell gear damage.
  • Paint and Decals: Faded or peeling? It’s been in the sun — UV ages seals and wiring. Fresh paint over rust? Dodgy cover – up.
  • Oil Leaks: Black or milky drips under the cowl? Seals or gaskets might be shot — big bucks to fix.

Grab a rag and wipe around — clean motors hint at care; grimy ones suggest a hard life.

2. Engine Hours: The Odometer of Outboards

Hours tell the story — low is gold, high is a gamble.

  • Check It: Newer models (post – 2000s) have hour meters — 50 – 200 hours/year is average for weekend use. A 2015 motor with 1,500 hours? Hammered. Under 500? Sweet.
  • No Meter?: Older ones don’t — judge by wear, service history, and seller’s yarn. “Barely used” with a rusty prop? Bull dust.
  • Aussie Twist: Coastal motors rack hours fast — Reef runs burn more than lake potters. Ask where it’s been.

3. Service History: The Paper Trail

A logbook’s your best mate — proof it’s been loved.

  • What to Look For: Regular oil changes (every 100 hours or yearly), impeller swaps (every 2 – 3 years), and spark plug checks. No records? Risky — assume the worst.
  • Red Flags: Gaps in servicing or “I did it myself” with no receipts. Pros use marine – grade oil — DIYers might skimp.
  • Salt Factor: Aussie saltwater chews impellers and anodes — check they’re replaced often.

No history? Haggle hard — unserviced motors hide gremlins.

4. Start It Up: Listen and Feel

Fire it up — cold, not warm (sellers might pre – run it to mask issues).

  • Cold Start: Should crank in 2 – 3 seconds — spluttering or smoke means trouble. Petrol smell? Fuel mix is off.
  • Idle: Smooth, no stuttering — rough idle hints at carb or injector woes.
  • Noise: Quiet hum, not a rattle or knock. Grinding? Gearbox grief. Whine? Bearings or impeller.
  • Smoke: Blue = oil burning (rings or seals); white = water in fuel (head gasket maybe).

Rev it — smooth power’s a winner; lag or coughs are a pass.

5. Water Test: The Real Deal

Dry land’s half the story — get it wet.

  • Hose Trick: Hook a hose to the water intake (flush port or muffs). Water should pee out the telltale in 10 seconds — no stream, no cooling, big problem.
  • On the Water: If you can, sea trial it (boat attached or seller’s rig). Full throttle — does it plane quick? Gear shifts smooth? Reverse works? Stalling or bogging down? Walk away.
  • Temp: Feel the block after 5 minutes — warm, not scalding. Overheating’s a death knell.

Aussie waters test cooling — salt clogs, sun bakes. No water test? Risk it only if cheap.

6. Prop and Lower Unit: The Business End

The prop and gearbox take the hits — check ‘em close.

  • Propeller: Bent blades, chips, or wobble — replaceable ($100 – $500), but haggling ammo. Spin it — stiff means seized bearings.
  • Shaft: Straight, no play — wiggle it. Slack’s a sign of worn seals or gears.
  • Oil: Drop the lower unit oil (screw at the bottom) — clear amber’s good; milky or black’s bad (water or wear). Smell burnt? Gears are cooked.

Saltwater motors need fresh oil — old stuff’s a red flag.

7. Compression Test: The Heartbeat

Compression’s the pulse — low, and it’s on life support.

  • How: Mechanic’s job ($50 – $100) — screw a gauge into spark plug holes. Even readings (e.g., 120 – 150 psi across cylinders) = healthy. One low? Rings or valves shot.
  • Why: Shows wear — high – hour motors fade. Aussie heat and salt stress ‘em — 50hp should hold 100+ psi.
  • No Test?: Risky — assume rebuild ($1,000 – $3,000) if it’s old.

8. Electronics and Controls: The Brains

Modern outboards have tech — make sure it works.

  • Wiring: Frayed or corroded? Salt’s eaten it — rewire’s $200 – $500.
  • Throttle: Smooth, no sticking — stiff means cables or linkage need love.
  • Tilt/Trim: Electric ones should lift quiet — grinding or slow? Motor or hydraulics failing.

Test every button — dead gauges or trim’s a pain to fix.

9. Seller’s Story: Sniff the Bull

Sellers spin yarns — trust your gut.

  • “Ran Last Week”: Prove it — start it cold.
  • “Freshwater Only”: Rust says otherwise — coastal use is Aussie norm.
  • “New Parts”: Receipts or it’s hot air.

Shifty vibes? Walk — plenty of motors on our site.

10. Price Check: Know the Market

Value’s your leverage — don’t overpay.

  • Benchmark: Check www.runboats.com.au — 5hp 2010 Yamaha, $800; 50hp 2015 Mercury, $4,000. Age, hours, brand matter.
  • Haggle: Rust, high hours, no history — knock 20 – 30% off. Clean, low – hour gem? 10% wiggle room.
  • Extras: Mount bolts, fuel tank, prop included? Sweetens the deal.

Aussie Challenges

  • Salt: Coastal motors rust — freshwater’s rare gold.
  • Sun: UV fries seals — check rubber bits.
  • Use: Reef runs or river dawdles — hours and wear differ.

Final Steps

  • Mechanic: $100 – $200 for a pro once – over — worth it for $2,000+ buys.
  • Receipt: Get it written — price, condition, “as is.”
  • Test Again: Post – deposit, run it hard — refund if it flops.

The Win

Picture this: a $1,500 20hp Yamaha, 300 hours, purrs like a kitten. Paired with your tinnie, you’re fishing the Hawkesbury by weekend — $3,500 saved over new. At www.runboats.com.au, we’ve got the boats and motors — check smart, and you’ll score a beauty.

Final Thoughts

A used outboard’s a gamble — check it right, and it’s a steal; skip the steps, and it’s a sinker. Eyes, ears, and a test run sort the champs from the chumps. Browse our listings, kick the prop, and grab a winner — the water’s waiting, and your motor’s the key.