captkevin wrote:
Think it might be best to find a good marine mechanic & let them go thru everything & handle the start up. Lots of things are going to need replacing & a good mechanic should be able to cover all of them.
At this time of year? Yeah, right. Try finding a reputable marine mechanic with enough free time to fiddle with everything involved. That and you'd pay an absolute arm and a leg for it. Assuming you can even find a 'reputable marine mechanic'. Otherwise you'd have the "fun" of having your job get pushed further and further into the season because there's other simpler stuff he can tackle meanwhile. After taking your 'deposit' money, of course, and then gouging you for per-diem storage (so he makes more money by not doing your work). Call me skeptical, but that's probably not the best route to take for recovering a basket-case boat. There's no way you'd ever recover the total expense involved because of the labor. If it's your own sweat you can chalk it up to your own 'fun, learning experience' and only 'pay' for parts.
If you're mechanically inclined and the engine hasn't seized it's not all that complicated. Just a lot of disconnect this from there and replace it likewise.
If the engine has seized and needs replacing, known as a repower, then it gets a lot more complicated. Mainly because you need a forklift or other sort of crane to get the decking out of the way and the engine removed and reinstalled. And even if the engine isn't seized completely, just marginal, if you really intend to keep the boat then a repower might be the best way to avoid a season full of one breakdown after another. Just be aware you'll likely never recover the cost of it given the age of the boat and the resale market.