HORSESHOE BUOY YELLOW

The HORSESHOE BUOY YELLOW is an indispensable piece of safety equipment designed for rapid deployment in water rescue situations. Its distinctive bright yellow color ensures maximum visibility, making it easily identifiable even in challenging conditions. This buoyancy aid is specifically shaped to be thrown accurately and provides reliable flotation for individuals in distress, offering them a crucial lifeline until professional rescue arrives. Its robust construction is built to withstand the harsh marine environment, ensuring dependable performance when it's needed most.

  • Key Features
  • Ergonomic Horseshoe Shape: Designed for comfortable grip and easy throwing.
  • Durable Construction: Built to withstand marine environments and repeated use.
  • Reliable Flotation: Provides essential buoyancy for individuals in distress.

This yellow horseshoe buoy is a critical safety tool for docks, marinas, swimming areas, and any location adjacent to water where a risk of drowning exists. The horseshoe design is not only visually striking but also practical, allowing a person in the water to easily grab onto it and maintain their position while waiting for assistance. Unlike some other flotation devices, the horseshoe shape can be more readily gripped by someone who may be panicking or weak. The bright yellow color is a standard safety feature, ensuring that the buoy stands out against the water, whether it's calm or rough, day or night.

Manufactured for durability, this buoy is resistant to UV degradation and water absorption, ensuring its longevity and effectiveness over time. Its lightweight nature allows for quick and efficient deployment by lifeguards, shore patrols, or even bystanders. The HORSESHOE BUOY YELLOW is a testament to effective safety design, prioritizing visibility, ease of use, and reliable performance to enhance water safety protocols and potentially save lives. It is an essential addition to any comprehensive water safety plan.

Product Specifications

Specification Value
Type Horseshoe Buoy
Color Yellow
Material Polyethylene Shell with Foam Core
Approvals USCG Approved Type IV
Weight Approx. 2.5 lbs
Dimensions Approx. 22" x 26"
MFG Number 920

Mariners Warehouse vs Others

Built to match OEM standards while delivering reliable performance and peace of mind.

Features

Mariners Warehouse

Others

Performance ✔️
Warranty Support Reliable warranty Limited or unclear warranty terms
Customer Trust Trusted by thousands of marine customers Unverified buyer trust
Pre-tested before shipping for reliability ✔️
OEM performance standards ✔️
Simple return process ✔️

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FAQs

Find answers to common questions below

The outboard lower unit, frequently referred to as the gearcase, is the bottommost section of your motor responsible for converting engine power into actual thrust. Its primary function is to house the drive shaft, propeller shaft, and the internal forward, pinion, and reverse gears that transfer rotational power from the engine's powerhead down to the propeller. It also acts as the structural anchor for the skeg (the protective bottom fin) and contains the water pump impeller which constantly cycles cooling water up into the engine block. If your current casing is leaking or cracked, upgrading to a complete lower unit replacement ensures your entire propulsion and cooling system stays fully protected.

You can identify a failing lower unit by checking for four critical warning signs during routine maintenance. First, if draining your gear oil reveals a milky, discolored, or chocolate-milk appearance, your water seals are blown and internal corrosion has already started. Second, finding large metallic chunks or heavy flakes attached to the magnetic drain plug indicates that your internal gears are actively shredding. Third, a loud clunking noise or noticeable slipping when shifting into forward or reverse means your clutch dog or forward gears are severely worn. Finally, if your propeller is completely seized and won't spin freely by hand while in neutral, your bearings have likely locked up. Replacing a severely damaged assembly early prevents catastrophic engine failure and saves thousands in secondary repair costs.

No, you should never use standard automotive 80W-90 gear oil in a marine gearcase. Outboard motors require specialized high-performance marine gear lubricant because it is formulated with advanced emulsifiers and rust inhibitors that automotive oils completely lack. Marine-grade lubricants are specifically engineered to maintain their essential lubricating properties and protect vital components even when contaminated with up to 10% water. Using standard automotive fluid will cause the oil to break down instantly the moment moisture bypasses a seal, leading to rapid gear friction, overheating, and total internal breakdown. Protecting your investment with premium marine-spec fluid ensures your gears survive the harsh underwater environment season after season.

While you can technically start an outboard powerhead without the lower unit attached, doing so is highly discouraged and poses a massive risk to your engine. Because the water pump impeller lives inside the lower unit assembly, running the engine without it means there is absolutely zero cooling water reaching the engine block. Without continuous water flow, a dry marine engine will experience immediate overheating and can warp cylinder walls or blow head gaskets within 30 to 45 seconds. Additionally, the drive shaft remains completely unsupported during operation, creating a dangerous mechanical vibration. If you are troubleshooting an engine issue, it is always safer to install a verified replacement gearcase first to ensure proper cooling and structural alignment before turning the key.

Choosing between a complete lower unit replacement and a rebuilt kit depends entirely on the structural integrity of your current gearcase housing. A lower unit rebuild kit is an excellent, cost-effective choice if your outer casing is entirely intact, uncracked, and the failure was limited to a single worn bearing, a bad seal, or routine water pump wear. However, if your housing is cracked, the skeg is snapped off, or exploded gears have gouged the internal walls, a complete replacement unit is highly recommended. Buying a fully assembled unit eliminates hours of expensive, highly technical shimming labor, minimizes shop downtime, and provides a fresh factory-spec seal that a partial rebuild simply cannot guarantee.

To ensure a perfect 100% fitment match, you must verify your engine's specific build configuration before ordering because marine manufacturers frequently change gear ratios and shaft profiles across different model years. You will need to locate your exact engine serial number, confirm the horsepower (HP), and note whether it is a 2-stroke or 4-stroke model. Finally, you must measure your shaft length from the top of the transom mounting bracket down to the anti-ventilation plate above the prop, which typically defaults to Short (15 inches), Long (20 inches), or Extra Long (25 inches). Matching these precise specifications guarantees that your new aftermarket or OEM-spec unit bolts on flawlessly with zero modifications required.