12/18/2025
A proper lower unit repair is not as simple as pulling damaged gears and installing new ones. Gears are only one part of a precision system that must be set up correctly to survive under load.
One of the most critical steps is setting gear backlash.
Backlash is the controlled amount of clearance between the forward, reverse, and pinion gears. This clearance is intentional and necessary. Too tight, and the gears overheat, whine, and quickly destroy themselves. Too loose, and you get clunking, shock loading, and premature gear failure—often taking bearings and seals with it.
Correct backlash is achieved through:
Proper shim selection
Measuring gear patterns
Verifying bearing preload
Following manufacturer-specific specifications
Skipping these steps or “guessing” shim thickness may allow the lower unit to spin on the bench, but it will fail under real-world torque and prop load.
This is why professional lower unit repair takes time, specialized tools, and experience. When done correctly, the result is quiet operation, smooth shifting, and long-term reliability. When done incorrectly, the lower unit may last hours—or even minutes.
If a repair quote seems higher than expected, it’s often because the technician is doing more than replacing parts—they’re setting up the gearcase the way the manufacturer intended.
Precision matters below the waterline.