Folks,
BE VERY CAREFUL OF TURNING THE PROP BY HAND WITH THE MOTOR IN GEAR!! THIS IS NOT CONSIDERED SAFE!!
Be ABSOLUTELY SURE that the key is not 'ON'. If the motor fires, you could lose some of your hand!!
The only safe way to turn a motor by the prop is to first REMOVE the spark plugs. Just pulling the plug wires off the plug is not enough. The rubber plug wire wants to jump back onto the plug.
Remember that older 2-stroke motors and all kickers make spark by rotation, not by the battery!! And ANY kicker motor can fire when turning the prop by hand with the motor in gear. On rope start motors, turn the motor by the pull rope. TO BE SAFE, DO NOT TURN THE PROP BY HAND IF THE MOTOR IS IN GEAR!!!
Shifting the motor into gear when not running can damage the shifter(dog clutch), shift cables, or control box. An outboard shifter(dog clutch) has square 'dogs' which fit into square recesses in the gear. If the 'dogs' are not aligned with the recesses in the gear, it won't shift and forcing the lever can cause damage.
If you must shift a non-running motor, have someone 'rock' the prop back and forth to align the clutch dog.(Hold the prop by the round exhaust hub, not by the blades.) When shifting a running outboard, 'snap' the lever from neutral into gear. DO NOT slowly 'slide' the shifter into gear. If you hear a rachetting sound when shifting, you are not moving the lever fast enough.
Shifting a motor running on a flusher is NOT recommended. Its dangerous to have the prop spinning in the air and the prop will 'coast' (spin) longer in air than it would in water.
In my long experience as an outboard mechanic and o/b owner, I have never had an impeller 'freeze' to its housing and then tear the blades. I am not saying that it couldn't happen, but I have stored my motor and worked on stored motors and not had that problem. However, starting an outboard 'dry' (without being in the water or on a flusher) will melt the rubber impeller to the housing. It only takes a few seconds of the motor running to melt a dry impeller. Old impellers can become brittle and the tips of the blades can break off so changing the impeller after two to three years is not a bad idea.
End of rant!! Please be safe when working on your motor!!