Luke and others.....
I have been to a Honda dealer and talked to many people and searched the web. I know this thread is getting like a personal blog, but there may be a newbie (or oldie) here that may oneday need this info.
1. The local Honda dealer says 5 or 6 lower units per year come in to him (could I interpolate that to 500 in the US per year?) with cracked lower units. He says it is cheaper to get a new lower unit than rebuild it. So I am talking to Santa.
2. Welding may or may not work. The seal of the "O" ring on the bearing carrier (see pic below) may not retain the oil if the shell of the lower unit is cracked and therefore perhaps warped a bit even though the crack is before the oil area.
3. The cracking can come from, a) leaving the lower unit tilted up and letting rain fall into it and then freezing with the ice expansion cracking the lower unit shell, b) aluminum corrosion stress cracking, where the corrosion expands and cracks the shell at the nut area. c) the nut may be corroded so badly into the lower unit that the two are mated for good and crack may occur when trying to separate them.
4. The hulltruth.com board has a shouting match among Honda owners about whether this is a inherent design flaw in Honda lower units or if poor maintenance is the problem. (My opinion is 20% former - 80% latter).
5. Even if the nut comes out, the bearing carrier may be corroded in the lower unit and break when trying to remove it. Google searches turn up the trick of putting the lower unit in a warm bath or using a propane torch to heat it gently to expand the shell of the lower unit and perhaps loosen the bearing carrier.
6. I ordered a shop manual for my engine. In the meantime, my local library had a Johnson/Evenrude shop manual that said their nut and bearing carrier should be removed and cleaned and anti-seized with compound and returned to the lower unit ANNUALLY. haha - who does that? (I will.....when this episode is completed.)
7. Another owner I found says that he religiously washes out the lower unit behind the prop every time and then uses salt-away solution, and rinses again, and his lower unit is pristine.
8. Let's go for a moment to common sense part of this. True, the regular cleaning sounds like the answer, but I bet the average Joe never gives this area a thought. 5-10-20 years and the lower unit is corroded together, but so what, if there is no crack or oil leak. Or even if there is a crack, weld it or JB weld it, as long as there is no oil leak? And a bicycle pump and 3 to 4 # of pressure will reveal the source of the leak, says some on the web.
9. And there is the school of thought I found that unless you open the lower unit oil plug and see the milkshake indication of water intrusion, never touch the lower unit except to change oil. And if you do find water intrusion, only panic if your get actual water out of the lower unit. If it is milky, just capture it and let the milky oil sit in a jar for a day and see if it separates. If it does not, don't worry. One guy said his lower unit oil has been milky for years.
10. Bottom line............ I think good maintenance will keep outboards going for years and years. Some can (and want to) do that maintenance themselves and others use a dealer. Either way, the Honda can last forever, I think, if maintained properly. [This whole thing of cracks has to apply to Johnson and Evenrude motors as well since they have a indentical bearing carrier and nut. I don't know about other makes.]
