Does Marvel Mystery Oil Actually Work? Johnson Engine Part 5
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
- My Johnson has low compression! Let's try both Marvel Mystery Oil and Johnson/Evinrude Engine Tuner to see if they help.
Johnson playlist: • Johnson Outboard
Entire Johnson engine series:
Part 1: • 1952 Johnson Outboard ...
Part 2: • 1952 Johnson Outboard....
Part 3: • My Johnson Needs An Ov...
Part 4: • Understanding 2 Stroke...
Part 5: • Does Marvel Mystery Oi...
Part 6: • Total Rebuild Of My Tw...
Part 7: • Repairing a 1952 Johns...
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Unfortunately with only 1 engine worth of data, there's no way to get a real answer as to whether the products work or not. They might work very well, just not in this case.
'we're going to test that' im sure he appreciates the call out
ProjectFarmCraft101
@@Runoratsu Sounds good to me.
Todd, a collab?
steve
we're gonna test that - project farm lol
Now it's only fair if ProjectFarm talks about Johnson!
To be fair PF has tested the stuff lol
"Keep your Johnson in a vise" - Pure AvE. Good job.
Lol, I love AvE videos, he has a language of his own.
That would be Big Johnson
😆Paused viewing to say that I got a good chuckle out of the "we're gonna test that" reference. I've really enjoyed this Johnson engine series so far. 😎👍
Whats this the 4th video? WE GET IT, YOU'RE PROUD OF YOUR JOHNSON!
Ha! You have no idea!!
I guess you were to distracted by his Johnson, it says number 5 in the title.
The “we’re gonna test that” had me a chuckling
I have been watching your videos about this outboard, I have worked on a ton of these old johnsons and these were not very high compression motors to begin with straight from the factory. They were around 90 PSI per cylinder if you have above 70 PSI and they are within 10% of each other (the cylinders) the motor will run fine. Like I say I have worked on well over a hundred of these motors. These motors can be cranky when you do not set your low and high speed needle correctly. In a previous video it was only running on one cylinder, when you got it to run on both cylinders and it idled down as low as it did that is another telltale that your compression is fine. If the compression was too low that motor would not have idled well at all.
I have an old Coleman 1700 watt generator. I got it quite old and used but it would run for 3 hours on a tank of fuel consistently. I started adding Marvel Mystery Oil into the fuel tank and the generator shockingly began to run for 7 hours on the same amount of fuel. I was a win for me. I like your Johnson. hahaha
I asked my ten year old nephew what he thought about your mystery oil to which he replied 'nothing.' I asked him why not and his response - 'nobody knows, it's a mystery.'
I guess there can be wisdom in kids.
I never thought I'd enjoy watching a man spend this much time on his Johnson this much!
Keep your Johnson in a vise. Nice shoutout. Love it!
I use it in cars that are running rough. It smoothes the engine and improves my gas mileage. I use it as a gasoline additive. Love it
"We're gonna test that....." Shades of ProjectFarm. :) Hahaha!
One thing I've learned that any crankcase seal bad you will have issue also thanks to my uncle's that had a shop in pa built my first motor by 8 good old trail 90 was poor and my uncle's always had bike lay around and said I show u then use have something to ride when we go there on the weekends now in my 40s there nothing I wouldn't tackle and don't act like u no it all always take advice if there skilled I just came across your channel and had a old 25 hp Johnson and like the way u do thing and explain it.keep up great work and have a wonderful day.
We gonna test that.. I see what you did there ;-) One Farm greeting another one. Cheers from Germany
I swear by this oil. As a certified stihl mechanic ,this stuff has saved many people carberators.
I haven't had gummy carbs in any stuff I run MMO gas mix in
I use it to make my own pentrating oil, mixed with acetone and a few drops of dish detergent makes for a rather effective mix. The dish detergent slows evaporation and helps the oil cling to and follow surfaces better.
Its freed up dozens of old stuck motors. If a motor is stuck, I generally flush it out with lacquer thinner, then soak it in evaporust to disolve any rust, then follow up with the Marvel mix and it works nearly every time on those old motors.
Hold throttle open when checking compression
You get a like just for the "We're gonna test that" quote!
Did an experiment years ago with a Homelite weedeater. Used MMO instead of 2 cycle oil because I had a couple spare crank cases.
Used it for several years and never had a problem.
Got the idea from racing rotary engine guys that add it to their gas to protect apex seals.
That bucket looks like a hallowed cauldron with the engine being cooked in it ;)
“… Chauldron Deep … “
Stuffs great for cleaning engines
It’s funny as hell looking back on these old videos
I had this identical motor as a kid on the Rogue river in Oregon. I think mine may have been an 8 or 10 horse but maybe not.
Otherwise everything about it is the same. My dad's motor was attached to an old wood boat with aluminum metal skin. I'd go upstream till I reached a rapids I could not get past. The boat would just stop in the current. I got used to rock locations to avoid sheering the prop pin. Which I did many times. I cut nails up to the pin length used many. Had a can of them with me at all times.
My dad would take the boat out with a buddy and always sheer the pin cuz he didn't know where the rocks were.
Memories...................
I worked on those older outboards for a few years back in the late 70's, and 60psi compression was pretty normal even after the engine cleaner was used. We used that engine cleaner on every one of those older motor that came in using the older oil/gas mix ratio of 16 to 1 before switching it over to a 50 to 1 ratio with Evenrude or Johnson outboard motor oil. That low compression is not a problem with the motor and allows them to idle really slow while trolling. The exhaust holes in the shaft are there to prevent the exhaust back pressure from killing the motor at low idle.
I think you can add the Marvel Mystery Oil to the Gas too, that way a little is present in the Engine the whole time it is running. Might help a tiny bit.
The Marvel Mystery oil can be added to crank case, oil change on 4 strokes. Also in gas tanks of 4stroks & mixed with 2stroke gas. For a top silencer lube. I've ran it in my Dirt track race cars 4wheeler, dirt bikes, evey thing cars, trucks u name it. I believe in it 100% Also these are the best ways to get the better results & performance from the product. I enjoyed your video on cutting down the tree & plan on watching more 👍🏻
That’s an idle exhaust relief. Typically, cooling water exits with exhaust to cool everything.
As a kid, my dad had his grandfathers Johnson just like this one. My father bought a boat and took me and my grandfather fishing many many times in that boat. The handle ended up getting broken off, but I sure remember that engine. I sure thank you for these videos. I sure wish I had that motor still.
I add Marvel Mystery oil a couple times a year to the air systems on my lowboy trucks .
It seem to keep the air valves working nicely . I add maybe a shot glass full , in the line behind the air drier .
If I have a sticking valve on a trailer , just our some in the glad hand .
I am a solid fan of the Mystery oil !
Looking forward to
#6 of Johnson series.
No pun intended. ;)
Setting those points with a feeler gauge is just a starting point. Use a multimeter to fine tune them and set the timing on the firing correctly. For years, I didn't know that, but once I figured it out, these old motors crank much easier and run much smoother. Google will tell you the procedure. As far as the compression, those numbers aren't a deal breaker. They will still run fine with those numbers on that size engine. Also, run a couple of tanks of gas through it and see if those numbers improve.
Your videos are great to watch. Marvel Mystery oil is excellent additive to use to lubricate engines,if stored a long time, rusty,dirty,gummed up. Use in Gas and may help clean internal parts. It's is not overhaul in a can as most additives included. I have used it for many engines
never thought I'd enjoy a video series of a man messing with his Johnson
The smoke screen produced (engine fixes in bottles and can),is perfect for evading Fish and Game officers on the other hand.
Glad to see another video with you and your Johnson!
I think with continued use, the rings will loosen up more as well as reseat themselves to the cylinder walls and it'll just run and run and run just fine.
Came here for the Johnson jokes 😂
Me too.
I bought a $5 lawnmower at garage sale that smoked tremendously. I changed the oil and added some MMO plus put fresh gas in with a bunch of MMO in it. Ran it for a about a half hour with it smoking when all of a sudden it stopped smoking. Ran that cheap lawnmower at my hunting camp for years and it always ran great.
I think Wayne Carini from Chasing Classic Cars loves dumping the Mystery Oil into old engines on the barn cars he finds. Seems to do a good job making so they can turn the engines over after they've sat for years.
So will WD40 making so they can turn the engines over, so big f'n deal, concerning marvel that is. Marvel is snake oil. Nothing is so easy as for you to believe what you already wanted to believe. [such as marvel works]
That's a pretty versatile Johnson.
We’re gonna test that!
You could put a borescope down the spark plug hole and see if it is scored. Or take off the head and see. Also you could just replace the rings and pistons if needed and hone the bore.
i love your videos and I love the G rated AVE “Johnson” in a vice comment! Keep up the great work!
I use Marvel in crank case oil (small engines) before changing the oil. Also use a bit in the fuel if it's not sounding right. I use it most as an air tool oil and in 25 years have yet to pooch an air motor, even on cheap Chinese stuff.
Sisyphean patience and almost Lokian humor. I like it, thanks.
Well you no what they say try,try,and try again you will get it started eventually and it will run nice and smooth, have you heard of sea foam that’s ment to be really good you put it in the oil and fuel it cleans every thing out good luck looking forward to seeing it run properly
I was a boat mechanic for 4 years. Any other oil with a high viscosity would do the same thing if applied the same way. It tells me don't believe everything you read on the label!! The only that really improves compression is removal and cleaning or replacement of the rings and or pistons. If a cleaner removes the carbon from the rings and they loosen up, compression will improve. These old two stroke engines often used a 20:1 oil mix and carboned up quickly. Often the transfer ports got the bulk of carbon, clogged up, and the engine would not breath right.
boiling out the engine in a hot dip tank solved that problem. Eventually newer 2 stokes went to 50:1 mixes. All the newest outboards seem to be 4 stokes and believe me they are far more reliable. I can say for sure as a tool & die maker that Marvel Mystery oil mixed 1/3 with motor oil, and 1/3 Kerosene makes a great thread cutting lubricant and cutting oil in many applications!
Have you ever tried any "Engine Restore"?
I am very skeptical of miracles in a can, but a friend talked me into trying it in an old 3 cylinder diesel engine on a small utility tractor. I was as shocked as anyone by the results. The engine quit smoking so much and ran a lot smoother than it ever had for me. I ran the thing for another two years, dumping in another can every time I changed the oil. I sold it a few years ago and it is still running strong with no smoke out the exhaust yet. I'm still amazed by the difference in the engine.
I was going to ask the same thing until it hit me that Engine Restore goes into the crankcase and I do not think adding it to fuel in a 2 stroke would work.
@@FloridaTwoWheelAdventures, You're right, I wonder if they have it for 2-stroke engines too? I'll have to do a search and find out. Thanks for pointing that out.
Unfortunately as you rJohnson gets older, it will lose some power and the pistons will not produce the power that it once did as a younger model...Keep it up, your efforts seems to be working with the help of others. 🙂
Marvel Mysterian Oil (96 tears) is a useful light oil in general. I use it in many areas.
Never fail to chuckle at the Johnson jokes!!! 😁
I think many of us like watching you work on your Johnson. I understand you don't want to tear it completely down butt... You have spent a lot of time trying this and that. Maybe it's time to get a hold of some rings and replace them. LOL, or perhaps make some rings some how! I'm guessing new rings aren't going to be easy to find.
Alternatively, they might not work because they might not work.
I'm enjoying the mystery and brilliant detective work.
Massive Respect from New Zealand
😀👍
My brother had a 318 Mopar and put 340 heads on it gave it 75 psi compression it could idle so slow you could count the fan blades. It ran great. I had a set of 401 heads milled so much the cranking compression was 185 psi it ran great. I've seen newer Mazda engines with over 230 psi compression. it's all bore stroke and combustion chamber volume.
My dad said don’t ever use that stuff because you might loosen up the stuff that’s holding the engine together
I erased one comment on the rebuild in an earlier video, but I am back at it. First off your videos are great and thanks for the entertainment. The obsession over compression on this motor I believe is misdirected. From what I saw of that video your rings and cylinder walls were fine. For the most part I think you have not yet rightly adjusted the carburetor high and low circuits.The assumption that the brass crank bearing/seals are ok per visual inspection can bite you. Those small displacement engines have precious little tolerance for loss of crankcase pressure so those bearings and the seal of the crankcase halves is super critical. The cross hatching on the cylinders is primarily to enable ring seating...a wearable surface....and to retain lubricating oil to adequately lube the piston and cylinder sliding surfaces. The absence of cross hatch does not necessarily equate to low compression. I would not have been surprised to observe that a simple increase in two cycle oil ratio would have bumped up compression, that oil is the critical last factor to perform the seal at the rings and the crankshaft bearings. This test of Marvel M.O. is a bit off base, MMO has its application where it removes sludge and dirt that are sticking rings and other sliding surface parts, liker lifters and associated valve train parts, so I absolutely do not see a use for it with this outboard. Any liquid into the spark plug port "may" have the effect of a compression increase but it is not proving anything in this example.
If the rings are not worn out and still have some spring rebound to the you might try to add a bit of kerosene just a cap/teaspoon or so. If it frees your rings make sure to try and recover the MMO and kerosene it may be in the exhaust area.
"We're going to test that" Ahhhhh Project Farm LOL ... Nice work! :)
You have a really nice Johnson!
I'm 64 and have seen MMO over the years and never used it until about 20 years ago when I used it in my son's truck that had a lifter tick it worked great I just used it about a year ago again for my Tacoma which was using oil between changes dumped a quart in and changed the oil at one thousand seem to fix the problem
6:30 I'm pleased that you realized that it wasn't a fair test unless you ran the engine, that product should be renamed Marvel Mystery Snake Oil!...... Your Johnson rings are knackered!
Count yourself lucky your Johnson still works at that age😊
Ave and Project Farm, Both I watch as well. lol Nice
Those old motors were around 90 psi wet from the factory 60 psi would be your bottom number. Probably around 300-500 RPM's. It should also be 25:1 oil ratio so it was a drinker of oil. Another thing to consider is if you run it in a tub like that run use a fan. The exhaust from the engine will choke it out think fuel/air mixture.
25:1 is way too lean. It will kill your engine!
I'd say 50:1 is the correct number.
@@kalleklp7291 Not for those old Johnson's.
@@hawkeyemarine They really go that low? I will have that in mind when I repair my old Seahorse 3 HP. :)
@@kalleklp7291 yes and actually 25:1 is more oil not less. 25 parts of gas to 1 part of oil verses 50 parts of gasoline to 1 part of oil. Seems like it would be the other way but it isn't.
@@hawkeyemarine Yes. I just checked my old Johnson Seahorse (JH19A) from 1964. They went down to a 50:1 mix by then (according to the original sticker on it). Maybe two-stroke oil developed a lot during the few years between.
John get a borescope type video camera to drop down your cylinder then look for vertical scratches, Chickanic u-tube girl uses this all the time when diagnosis on small engines, these are less than 100$ and really useful.
That engine has a "few" miles on it its safe to say. Cleaning the carbon off of very worn rings will actually lower the compression. After the good cleaning achieved by both of these products, it's time for a good dose of RESTORE ( 1/2 0f the 4cyl treatment size ???) If you're going to rebuild it anyway, it be interesting to see the results. It does work on 4 stroke engines. Buddies 300,000 mile old Saturn, gets a dose every year now and still improves the compression enough to run surprisingly well. I believe in MARVEL Mystery Oil in the fuel too, to get at the rings from the top when the engine is hot.. Interesting Video 👍Thanx; Jethro
your engine appears to work fine
I used it for years, the thing about engine bore and rings, a thing called metal gone, even marvel can't fix that.
Acts like Seafoam. Used it in my Mercury car. I sprayed it in the carburetor, and it wanted to stall out the engine. Black s.oke came out the tail pipe, and the engine roared back to life. Still use it on my small engines. I bet it's a lot cheaper than Johnsons.
I've always thought about the lyrics🤔 To Deep Purple song "SMOKE ON THE WATER" Now I understand😁😎 And I really like your videos!
Try this. Using Klotz part #200 at a mix ratio of 32 - 1. This will get rid of that smoke. For fuel use recreational fuel. The carbon will not build up in the engine, also that fuel will not damage rubber parts in your fuel system. Most all my engines gained compression. There ya go!.
i've used it many time, not sure if it helped but it didn't do any harm
Late again sorry: Best “ mechanic in a can” is actually a product by Johnson evinrude bombardier called “Engine tuner” follow directions on can. It will give you the best shot at freeing carbon stuck rings. It also works great as a carb cleaner. Disassemble carb throw all jets and small parts in carb bowl fill with tuner, soak overnite , amazing. It of course will not cure worn or damaged cylinders. Clearly that’s your case. As I finish typing this you bring out “ the tuner”. LOL
My dad used to use that in everything!
in youre earlier episodes i commented on my Dad buying one of those back in 1963 and it ran great outside the waterbarrel meaning rings were bad shure enough the guy he gave it to reringed it and new head gasket and it ran all day
It just doesn't get old, does it? lol But here's the big question: Why have Johnson innuendo? It's an Outboard motor for use in the Outdoors. Wouldn't outtuendo be more apropos? Or perhaps innueoutdo, because it's in the outdoors?
As for keeping your Johnson in a vise: I'm guessing there are too many that the Johnson IS the vice!
And a free word of advice: do NOT give the old ring(s) to the wife/S.O. I have it on good authority (I can't say how) that a woman does NOT appreciate a second-hand ring (not that any of these went on a 1st hand, but nonetheless).
Namaste
Where did you get Johnson innuendo? I said Johnson Evinrude
Saw this exact motor sitting outside a dockside restaurant in Tacoma being used, (along with several other brand engines) a decorations. It looks intact. It caught my interest because of your videos on this one. Could be good source of parts for you.
Love the nods to AvE and Project Farm!
"as high together as I can get them..." Sounds like California to me...
Just a guess...the two holes are for water pump bypass...???
How many times am I going to watch you play with your Johnson, it’s not strange at all.
I just watched a video of a guy playing with his Johnson and lubing up his ring(s)
Most 2 cycle old engines did not have high compression because the fuels were not that good. That is what my old mechanic friend taught me years ago.
Not sure if you have a compression spec for that engine, but I had a 1998 225 Evinrude/Johnson saltwater series. When I did a compression check all 6 cylinders were around 90 psi. I panicked until I saw the specs called for less then 100 psi new. So going back many years in technology, I wouldn't be surprised if that old Johnson had fairly low compression to start with. If it runs the way you want, I would be concerned with taking it all apart and risking not being able to find parts that are inevitably going to break.
Exactly where I was gonna go - what was the compression supposed to be?
I suspect an engine that old has reeds between the carb and crankcase housing in
Lieu of intake porting. Had an old Elgin 1.5 HP that had reeds and they go bad over time. Put some MMO in the cylinders with them vertical and slowly rotate the crank pulley to work oil around piston rings.
You can do the same thing with the Marvel Mystery Oil by adding hit along with your 2-stroke oil to the gasoline.
Definitely gotta call this series "only-Farms, playing with my old Johnson"
I don’t quite understand why you wouldn’t expect the engine to have higher compression wet. It was designed to be run wet. It gets its lube from the fuel❤ going into the cylinder
How would you like to work on my Johnson? But anyway I do have the very same model. I'm glad I found your videos on this. I'm planning on trying to get mine running again..
Cylinders a wet with oil. Plugs in and start, warm up, then test
I recommend mixing it in your gas in your vehicle. 2 Oz per 15 gallons. Think about those benefits
7:06 It should tell you that perhaps ROB in Illinois could have been paid well to leave that feedback about Marvel Mystery Oil.
Compression tests should be done at WOT.
I have had noticeable improvement with solid rocker carbureted engines using MMO in the fuel and oil. Some two strokes liked it too.
Not so much with newer engines though.
Marvel is good stuff ive used it with great success . try adding it to gas with seafoam too . also good to fog 2 n 4 cycle engines . also avoid cheap 2 cycle oil . manufacturers oil is hard to beat . 40 yrs plus experience is all i have to go by.
If ever you have a loose piston or sparkplug covered in carbon try, soaking them for a week in MMO and see if theres any visible difference! Good luck...
It does seam low for compression, but at the same time it’s not too bad this is an older motor and lower compression is easier to start. I’ve rebuilt a couple power heads and they was at 90-100 but they where newer engines than yours
The “engine tuner” reminded me of Amsoil Power Foam
You may have found a new use for that outboard! A mosquito killer 🎉!
This is like projectfarm for the mechanically-challenged, 😂
Head removal on your Johnson can be life changing.
Johnson’s and Hoses Oh my! 🤣