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Lubricants

Your Mercury Marine® engine needs the protection that only quality marine lubricants can provide, the kind of protection your engine simply will not get from a lubricant designed for use in automobile engines. Mercury Marine has developed a complete line of Mercury Precision Lubricants®, each a premium product designed to protect your Mercury® engine when it is on and off the water.

Mercury Precision Lubricants

Why use marine lubricants instead of automotive lubricants?

Harsh duty

A marine engine is designed to operate for hours at high rpms and under heavy load. This torturous duty requires special lubricants, which is why you should never use automotive oil in a marine engine. The extended high-rpm operation that a marine engine endures can shear (or split) inferior additive molecules, leading to permanent loss of viscosity. Mercury formulates its 4-stroke marine engine oil products with additives specifically designed to offer powerful shear resistance and viscosity retention – vital for long-term marine engine performance.

A cool operator

Marine engines operate at much lower temperatures than automotive engines. Mercury Precision Lubricants engine oils are formulated to provide outstanding protection against wear and corrosion at lower temperatures than automotive oil.

Tough neighbourhood

In the marine environment, corrosion – inside and outside the engine – is a constant threat. A marine engine often sits idle for weeks or months at a time, which creates an opportunity for condensation to collect inside the engine. Mercury Precision Lubricants oil products contain specific anti-corrosion inhibitors, which simply are not present in automotive engine oil, formulated to protect your engine under these conditions.

Mercury lubricants exceed industry standards

Marine engine manufacturers and the National Marine Manufacturers Association® (NMMA®) worked together to develop basic standards for engine oil specifically designed for the unique marine environment. Consumers should look for the distinctive trademark to identify marine engine oil that meets this standard. While “off the shelf” marine lubricants may meet this basic industry standard, Mercury Precision Lubricants are designed to exceed those standards, often by a significant margin.

Essential oil changes

Keeping up with scheduled oil changes is important for maintaining the peak performance of your hard-working engine.

 

Check the maintenance schedule in your owner’s manual. It will also include oil change instructions for your specific engine.

Check the manual or ask your Mercury authorised dealer for the recommended lubricant products for your marine engine.

Most four-stroke outboards and sterndrive engines require an oil change either annually or every 100 hours of operation.

Change engine oil before long-term or offseason storage, even if your seasonal use has not reached 100 hours. During operation, engine oil accumulates acidic combustion byproducts that can be harmful to internal engine components if left in the engine during storage.

Always replace the oil filter when you change the oil. There is no point in running clean oil through a dirty filter.

Warm the oil

Warm engine oil drains more quickly and completely than cold oil. When possible, plan to change your oil shortly after retrieving the boat from the water or run the motor on a flush hose for a few minutes before changing the oil (see your owner’s manual for flushing instructions).

Pump it

A Mercury oil drain pump (PN 802889A1) threads directly to the dipstick tube of many outboard, inboard and sterndrive engines and may be used to draw old oil from the sump, as an alternative to draining the oil. This method may allow you to complete an oil change with the boat in the water.

Use a filter wrench

A Mercury oil filter wrench can make it easier to remove and install the filter.

Check the gasket

Occasionally the oil filter O-ring gasket may stick to the engine after the oil filter is removed. Always carefully check the engine’s filter sealing surface for the old gasket. If you accidentally “double gasket” the new filter – screwing it on over the old gasket – it will likely leak and could cause engine damage.

Lubricate the gasket

Before installing a new filter, lubricate the rubber O-ring gasket on the filter with a finger dipped in clean engine oil. This allows the filter to seal against its mount without damaging or displacing the O-ring, which can also cause a leak.

Check your work

After completing the oil change, start the engine, either in the water or on a flush hose, and let it run for a few minutes. Then shut down and check the oil level on the dipstick. Also check for leaks around the oil filter. Starting the engine will circulate fresh oil through the engine before long-term storage.

Recycle

Always dispose of waste oil properly at an oil recycling facility.

Mercury oil filters

Designed to maintain a maximum oil flow rate and featuring high pleat counts for superior filtration levels, Mercury oil filters are the highest quality available for marine engine use. Mercury oil filters feature heavy duty canisters that will not leak, collapse or burst and an anti-corrosion coating that helps prevents the formation of rust or flaking that can block oil passages in the crankcase.

Oil change in a box

If you take pride in working on your own engine, a Mercury oil change kit is a convenient way to gather all the products you will need to do the job right. Available for many Mercury outboard models and for MerCruiser® sterndrive and inboard engines, each kit contains the appropriate quantity of Mercury 4-stroke marine engine oil along with a premium Mercury oil filter, a new drain-plug gasket and instructions.

Other lubrications points

Marine engines and drives have other lubrication points that may require an occasional service. See your Mercury Marine operation and maintenance manual for instructions specific to your engine.

Gearcase lubricant

Gearcase lubricant in outboard and sterndrive lower units should also be changed annually or at the service interval specified in the owner’s manual (typically after 100 or 200 hours of operation, depending on the model). Replacing the lubricant removes diminished additives and contaminants and provides an opportunity to inspect the lubricant for water.

Marine grease 

Every Mercury outboard and MerCruiser sterndrive has a number of points that require application of grease as part of regular maintenance. Grease acts as both a lubricant between moving parts and as a moisture barrier to keep water out of those moving parts. You will need to apply grease with a finger and with a grease gun.