Midwest Dealerships
515 Bald Knob Rd Johnsburg, IL 60051
(815) 788-1111
2587 S. Bay Shore Drive, WI 54234
(920) 854-4521
W73 E Wisconsin Ave Nashotah, WI 53058
(262) 367-2008
N2062 S Lakeshore Drive Lake Geneva, WI 53147
(262) 203-5293
N7536 Sterlingworth Dr. Elkhorn, WI 53121
(262) 742-3898
7453 Hwy X Three Lakes, WI 54562
(715) 546-3351
N8066 County Hwy P Whitewater, WI, 53190
(262) 473-5960
Florida Dealerships
1516 SE 46th Street Cape Coral, FL 33904
(239) 549-2628
2625 Davis Blvd Naples, FL 34104
(239) 732-8050
4295 Laura Street Port Charlotte, FL 33980
(941) 979-5219
G23 Paragon
G25 Paragon
Super Air Nautique G21
Super Air Nautique G23
Super Air Nautique G25
Super Air Nautique S21
Super Air Nautique S23
Super Air Nautique S25
Super Air Nautique GS20
Super Air Nautique GS22
Super Air Nautique GS24
Ski Nautique
Ski Nautique 200
Supra SE
Supra SL
Supra SA
Supra SV
Mondo
Max
Tykon
Kaiyen
Craz
Mojo
Makai
L Bowrider
L Series
LX Sport Series
Q Series
QX Series
R Bowrider
R Series
RX Sport Series
S Series
SV Series
SX Series
Sanpan Lounge
Sanpan Split Bench
Sanpan Twin
Sanpan Windshield
Aqua Patio Entertainment
Aqua Patio Lounge
Aqua Patio Split Bench
Aqua Patio Twin
Aqua Patio Sundeck
Aqua Patio Windshield
Monaco Cruise
Monaco Entertainment
Monaco Fishing
Monaco Lounge
Monaco Split Bench
Monaco Sundeck
Sweetwater Cruise
Sweetwater Entertainment
Sweetwater Fishing
Sweetwater Lounge
Sweetwater Split Bench
Xperience Cruise
Xperience Fishing
Xperience Split Bench
Mighty G Cruise
Mighty G Fishing
XP
A29
R4
R6
R8
R30
R33
R35
220S
CS22
New CS22
CS23
New CS23
2000 ES
LS2
LS4
LS6
LS9
2800
3300
LS36
21 OBX
LX2
LX4
LX6
29 OBX
33 OBX
LX36
LS2 Surf
LS4 Surf
LS6 Surf
LS9 Surf
33 SAV
38 SAV
LS4C
26 Express
26 XO
28 Express
33 Express
33 XO
36 XO
36 Grande Coupe
38 Grande Coupe
38 XO
38 FXO
38 FLY
42 FLY
42 FXO
42 Grande Coupe
42 XO
270 CR
280 CRX
310 CRX
200 CC
210 CC
220 CC
230 CC
240 DC
245 WA
260 DC
280 DC
E210 XS
E230 XS
220 SS SURF
240 SS SURF
260 SS SURF
270 SS SURF
280 SS SURF
E235 SURF
E255 SURF
E275 SURF
200 SS
210 SS
220 SS
240 SS
260 SS
270 SS
280 SS
290 SS
220 SS LPX
240 SS LPX
250 XSS
260 XSS
270 XSS
280 XSS
290 XSS
310 XSS
330 XSS
E220 XS
E240 XS
E260 XS
E280 XS
E290 XS
E305 XS
E235
E255
E275
E285
E305
SunDeck Outboard
SunDeck IO - Sterndrive
SunDeck Sport Outboard
SunDeck Sport IO - Sterndrive
FunDeck
Center Console
130 Super Sport
160 Super Sport
150 Montauk
170 Montauk
190 Montauk
210 Montauk
220 Dauntless
250 Dauntless
280 Dauntless
210 Vantage
240 Vantage
280 Vantage
320 Vantage
285 Conquest
325 Conquest
365 Conquest
405 Conquest
350 Realm
380 Realm
230 Outrage
250 Outrage
280 Outrage
330 Outrage
360 Outrage
380 Outrage
420 Outrage
Fisherman 180
Fisherman 216
Fisherman 236
Fisherman 257
Canyon 271
Canyon 306
Canyon 326
Canyon 336
Canyon 386
Canyon 456
231 CE
251 CE
281 CE
Freedom 215
Freedom 235
Freedom 255
Freedom 275
Freedom 285
Freedom 307
Freedom 325
Freedom 335
Freedom 375
Freedom 415
Express 330
Express 370
Adventure 218
Gulfstream 232
Marlin 300
15 FL
15 DK
16 FL
16 DK
17 CC
17 SC
18 CC
18 DK
18 SC
20 CC
20 SC
17 CCJ
17 CCJ DLX
18 CCJ
18 CCJ DLX
18 CCT
18 CCT DLX
1860WOFJ
20 CCJ
20 CCJ DLX
Guide V12
Guide V14
Guide V14 LT
Guide V16 XT
1036
1236
1436
1436 LW
1442
1448
1544
1548 VBW
1648
1652 VBW
1652WSOF
1852WSOF
1860WOF
1860 VBW
Bay 17
Bay 18 GX
Bay 18T GX
Bay 20 GX
Bay 20T GX
BAY 22 GX
Sportsman 1610
Sportsman 1610 SS
Sportsman 1710
Sportsman 1710 PFX
Sportsman 1810
Sportsman 1810 PFX
Sportsman 1910
Sportsman 2100
Sportsman 2400
Angler V 164 F
Angler V 164 C
Angler V 178 F
Angler V 178 C
Angler V 17 C
Angler V 17 SF
Angler V 17 T
Angler V 1750 SF
Angler V 18 SF
Angler V 1850 SF
Angler V 19 SF
Angler V 21 F
V150 T
V167 T
V177 T
V187 T
OF V150 T
OF V167 T
OF V177 T
OF V187 T
450 HP
425 HP
350 HP
300 HP
250 HP
225 HP
200 HP
150 HP
115 HP
90 HP
75 HP
70 HP
60 HP
50 HP
40 HP
30 HP
25 HP
20 HP
15 HP
9.9 HP
8 HP
6 HP
4 HP
2.5 HP
175 HP
Inboard Engine
Mercruiser Inboards
Outboard Motors
Four Stroke
Mercury Racing
PRO XS
Verado
Sterndrive Engines
Mercruiser Sterndrive
DF2.5
DF4A
DF6A
DF9.9B
DF15A
DF20A
DF25A
DF30A
DF90A
DF75A
DF60AV
DF60A
DF50AV
DF50A
DF40A
DF115B
DF140B
DF150A
DF175A
DF200A
DF225T
DF250T
DF250AP
DF300AP
DF350AMD
DF350A
DF300BMD
DF300B
DF250ATSS
DF250ATSSW
DF250SS
DF200SS
DF150SS
DF115SS
30 HCS
32 CS
37 CS
41 CS
415 CS
Open 352
Open 322
Open 302
Open 282
Open 262
Open 252
Open 232
Open 212
Heritage 261
Heritage 231
Masters 267
Masters 267OE
Masters 247
Masters 247OE
Masters 227
455CC
395CC
365CC
2024 335CC
335CC
315CC
285CC
235CC
273CC
253CC
243CC
1801 CC
2200 CC
2400 CC
2600 CC
2900 CC
18 SE
2100 SE
2300 SE
2500 SE
2120 SC
2320 SC
2420 SC
2520 XLD SC
2820 XLD SC
Tips for First-Year Boat Maintenance
Story by: Discover Boating. Original Article
You bought a boat. Now how do you maintain it? Just keep the following three points in mind, and the first year with a new boat should be smooth sailing. First off, engines, steering equipment, water pumps and anything else aboard that moves will benefit from use. Turn everything on and use it at least a couple of times a season. Raise and lower your anchor at the dock, for instance, if you never anchor out. Turn on a seldom-used air conditioner for at least 10 minutes every week or two. Let your circuit-breaker panel and the switches at the helm be your guide to be sure you don’t miss anything. This also ensures that everything is in working order if you ever need it. Next, keep it clean. This isn’t just aesthetic. If the engine space is clean, you’ll see an engine-coolant or steering-fluid leak right away, so you can have it taken care of before it gets worse. Debris in the waterways around deck hatches can clog drains. Then when it rains, if the water can’t drain, it finds its way into that hatch, and sometimes onto equipment that shouldn’t get wet. When you notice a bit of metal looking rusty or dull, take five minutes to polish it with wax that protects stainless steel and aluminum and cleans minor corrosion before it permanently etches into the finish. That time pays off at the dock, when your boat sparkles brighter than your neighbors’. And finally, the adage a stitch in time saves nine holds particularly true on boats. If you notice fluid leaking or salt deposits forming anywhere in the engine space, for instance, take care of those small things when you see them to avoid a bigger job to work on later. Use more than your eyes too. As you spend time aboard your boat, you’ll learn what noises and vibrations are normal. Pay attention when anything seems different, since that is often the first indicator of something amiss.
Beyond that general advice, here’s a quick list of maintenance items you’ll need to address during your first year:
Engines: In cold climates, winterize engines every fall to protect cooling systems where water might be trapped and freeze. At the same time, treat engine inner workings with fogging oil to prevent corrosion. Except for a few outboards, engines require an oil change, along with new oil and fuel filters, every year. Annual service also includes a comprehensive, though fairly simple, list of places to lubricate and inspect. Engine-cooling pump impellers last for two or three years, but change them more frequently if you often operate or dock in shallow, silty water, which abrades rubber impellers.
Underwater paint and hardware: Change sterndrive or outboard gear-case oil every fall, or at least check for water intrusion while winterizing the engine. Send propellers with more than a couple of minor nicks to the prop shop to be reconditioned. The paint on your boat’s bottom prevents marine growth, such as barnacles and sea grass, but its effectiveness varies by paint type, climate, region and even local water bodies. Ask around, but expect to repaint the boat’s bottom every one to three years. Unpainted metal anodes attached to sterndrives or inboard prop shafts and rudders are there to prevent corrosion. Replace them when they’re 50 percent deteriorated.
Batteries and electrical systems: Maintenance-free batteries should last for three years or more. Never ignore a hard-to-start engine, though, as even brand-new batteries occasionally fail. Fully charge batteries after each trip and before winter or prolonged storage, and have batteries load-tested every spring—a simple procedure done aboard the boat. Immediately address any signs of water dripping onto electrical panels or junctions, and don’t store gear where it might damage wiring.
Fiberglass: Rinse your boat thoroughly after each outing, and wash it once a week with mild boat soap—one that won’t remove wax. Southern latitudes and saltwater boating require wax as often as every two months from the main deck up. Northern and freshwater boaters might wax only once a season. You’ll know it’s time when grime becomes harder to wash off the boat. Between wax jobs, use a cleaner wax—which scours the dirt but also leaves behind a protective wax coating—to quickly touch up trouble spots.
Canvas and upholstery: Polyester or acrylic fabric covers and sunshades need just a good freshwater rinse, plus an occasional light scrub with Woolite or natural-soap flakes. Once or twice a season, rejuvenate stain and water repellency with fabric sealer. Use only manufacturer-approved cleaners on windowlike clear panels. Wash cushions with mild boat soap to remove sunscreen, food crumbs and dirt, and deep-clean and protect the fabric as needed with vinyl cleaner and protectant. Store cushions on their edge when you’re not using the boat so they dry inside and out.
Teak decks, wood trim and metal hardware: Wax is the best protectant and cleaner for metal, particularly aluminum. Whatever you choose—spanning bright, glossy varnished trim to just soap and water on teak, letting its natural oil protect the wood—stay on top of it. Stripping old varnish once it starts to crack and peel is expensive, but a coat of varnish midseason, as soon as the finish dulls noticeably, is a quick, simple job. Ignoring and then revitalizing teak also shortens its life.
Interior: Use only recommended cleaning products aboard—many boats use plastic vanity mirrors, for instance, which are damaged by alcohol in household glass cleaners. Water dripping from leaking hardware on deck can be hard to see, but if you find that one particular storage compartment smells musty, look around that area with a flashlight the next time you’re aboard during a rain shower. Some water invariably finds its way into the boat, which collects in the bottom of the hull, or the bilge, in nautical terms. Bilge pumps keep that water level low, but there is always a bit of water left that can’t be pumped out. Add biodegradable bilge cleaner wherever that water collects to keep the boat smelling fresh.
Air-conditioning systems: If your boat has air conditioning, consider using the dehumidifier mode while you’re not aboard, but only if you’re able to check on the boat every day or two. Clear debris from air conditioner’s seawater-plumbing strainers at least weekly, or anytime the air conditioner’s cooling-water stream coming out of the side of the boat seems to be weaker than normal. Clean the return-air filters in the cabin monthly. Most air-conditioner problems stem from poor seawater flow, so inspect pumps and plumbing a few times each season.
Owner’s manuals for each onboard system include maintenance schedules. When in doubt, ask a pro. Advice from other boaters is well-intentioned but not always correct for your boat. The boat dealer, or anyone who repairs boats for a living, is a much better source.
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