Maintenance

Marine engine maintenance that prevents expensive surprises.

Saltwater is patient. It waits. Then it invoices you. Use these practical maintenance checks for outboards, inboards, diesel engines and electric propulsion.

After every saltwater trip

Flush cooling passages, rinse external salt, inspect prop damage, check tell-tale flow and look for fuel, oil or water leaks.

Every 50 hours

Inspect anodes, battery terminals, steering, control cables, belts, hoses, clamps and prop nut security.

Every 100 hours

Typical service point for many engines: oil, filters, gear oil, plugs where applicable, water pump inspection and diagnostics.

Before storage

Stabilise fuel, clean bilge, charge batteries, protect electrics, check ventilation and cover without trapping moisture.

Common repair warning signs

  • Hard starting or repeated stalling after warm-up.
  • Weak cooling tell-tale, overheating alarms or steam.
  • Milky gear oil or engine oil suggesting water ingress.
  • Excessive vibration after propeller impact.
  • Fuel smell, oily bilge, cracked hoses or loose clamps.
  • Battery voltage drops under load or corroded terminals.

Maintenance rule

If a fault appears on the ramp, it started earlier. Log hours, fuel, service dates, parts used and symptoms. Your future mechanic will love you. Maybe not hug you, but close.

Use service planner
SystemWhat to inspectWhy it matters
CoolingImpeller, water flow, thermostats, heat exchanger, hosesOverheating can destroy engines fast.
FuelFilters, water separator, hoses, primer bulb, tank ventContaminated fuel is a classic breakdown cause.
ElectricalBattery, isolator, terminals, alternator output, fusesMarine vibration and corrosion punish weak wiring.
DriveProp, skeg, shaft, gearbox oil, sterndrive bellowsImpact and water ingress can become big invoices.

Maintenance FAQ

How often should a marine engine be serviced?

Many recreational engines follow annual or hourly service intervals, commonly around 100 hours, but the correct answer is always the manufacturer schedule for your model.

Do I need a marine mechanic?

For diagnostics, cooling repairs, fuel systems, warranty work and safety-critical systems, use a qualified marine mechanic. DIY is fine for simple checks if you know what you are doing.

Is flushing really important?

For saltwater outboards, yes. Freshwater flushing helps reduce salt build-up and corrosion in cooling passages.