Canada-Wide Sea-Doo Help Powered By UEW

Sea-Doo Parts, Engines & Repair Help

Whether you already know which Sea-Doo engine or part you need, you need a local repair option, or you are not sure what failed, start here. UEW can help route you toward replacement engines, fitment support, shipping information, warranty details, or a service request for review.

I Need Sea-Doo Service

Service Lead Request

Tell UEW what is going on with your Sea-Doo.

Submit your Sea-Doo repair request and UEW will review the details. We may recommend parts, an engine solution, or help connect you with a local repair option.

Your Information

Your Sea-Doo

What’s Happening?

Choose all that apply.

Additional Details

What Happens Next?

  • UEW reviews your request.
  • If your machine likely needs an engine or major parts, we'll recommend the best solution.
  • If local service is the best option, we’ll help route you toward a trusted repair option where possible.

I Need Parts: Quick Sea-Doo Engine Search

Start by choosing the closest engine family. Sea-Doo fitment can vary by year, horsepower, carb/RFI/DI setup, naturally aspirated vs. supercharged, and electronics.

Two-Stroke vs. 4-TEC: What You Need To Know

Two-Stroke

717, 787, 800 RFI, 951 & 951 DI

Sea-Doo two-strokes are simple, lightweight, and still worth saving when the hull and driveline are clean. The important part is fixing the original cause of failure before the replacement engine goes in.

  • Check carbs or fuel injection system
  • Inspect oil injection and lines
  • Pressure test for air leaks when applicable
  • Confirm rotary valve, intake, exhaust, and cooling condition
4-TEC / ACE

900 ACE, 1503 & 1630

Sea-Doo 4-stroke engines are not all interchangeable by displacement. Naturally aspirated and supercharged versions can differ in pistons, compression, electronics, intake, oiling, cooling, and supporting parts.

  • Confirm horsepower rating
  • Confirm supercharged or non-supercharged
  • Check intercooler and supercharger setup
  • Match year, model, and engine family before ordering

Sea-Doo 4-TEC Timeline

This is a practical buyer's timeline, not a complete BRP parts manual. Always confirm your exact year, model, horsepower, engine tag, and supercharger configuration before ordering.

Early 2000s: Rotax 1503 4-TEC Arrives

Sea-Doo moves heavily into 4-stroke PWC engines with the Rotax 1503 4-TEC family. These engines appear in naturally aspirated versions depending on model and trim.

Mid 2000s: 1503 Supercharged Performance Models

Supercharged 1503 engines become common in performance Sea-Doo models such as RXP, RXT, GTX SC, Wake Pro, and related high-output applications.

Late 2000s - Mid 2010s: 1503 Becomes A Core Platform

The 1503 family covers many 130, 155, 185, 215, 255, and 260 horsepower Sea-Doo applications. Fitment depends on year, electronics, intake, supercharger, intercooler, and model package.

2016+: 1630 ACE Performance Platform

Sea-Doo introduces the larger 1630 ACE platform for higher-output models. This family becomes important for newer performance and luxury Sea-Doo watercraft.

Modern Era: 1630 ACE NA & Supercharged Versions

Current 1630 ACE engines include naturally aspirated and supercharged versions. Model name alone is not enough to confirm the correct engine.

Common Reasons To Replace A Sea-Doo Engine

Low Compression

Hard starting, weak power, poor idle, or uneven compression often points to worn pistons, cylinders, rings, valves, or internal wear.

Crankshaft Or Bearing Wear

Two-strokes commonly develop crank bearing issues, seal problems, corrosion, or damage after water ingestion. Four-strokes can suffer bearing and crank damage from oiling or overheating problems.

Top End Failure

Scored cylinders, piston damage, detonation, lean running, dropped valves, or oiling issues can make a complete engine or short block the smarter move.

Water Ingestion

Water inside the engine can damage bearings, cylinders, rods, valves, and crankshafts quickly. Do not keep cranking or running the engine until it has been inspected.

Supercharger Failure

On supercharged Sea-Doo models, supercharger issues can create expensive engine damage if debris, heat, or boost-related failure affects the engine.

Unknown Used Engine Risk

Marketplace engines may be cheap upfront, but internal condition is usually unknown. A remanufactured engine gives you a cleaner starting point.

Core Charge & Ordering Options

Refundable Core Program

Most UEW Sea-Doo replacement engines use a refundable core charge. Core amounts vary by engine family and displacement. Many 500cc to 951cc 2-stroke engines commonly use a refundable core charge around $800 to $1,000, while larger 900cc+ 4-TEC, Spark, and ACE engines commonly use up to a $1,500 refundable core charge.

  • Pay core deposit and ship fast when inventory is available
  • Send your core first for inspection when available
  • Returned core should be complete, matching, and rebuildable
  • Final core approval depends on UEW inspection
  • Ask first if your engine is incomplete, seized, windowed, or disassembled

Warranty & Shipping Confidence

1 Year

Warranty-Backed Engines

UEW remanufactured engines are backed by warranty coverage when installed correctly, broken in properly, and operated with clean supporting systems.

  • Proper installation required
  • Break-in procedure required
  • Fuel, oiling, cooling, and electrical systems must be verified
View Warranty Details
Fast Delivery

Canada & USA Shipping

UEW supports customers across Canada and the United States with clear shipping options for replacement engines and core returns.

  • Canadian orders ship from Canada when available
  • USA orders ship from the USA when available
  • Built to reduce border hassle and delays
View Shipping Info
Fitment

Confirm Before Ordering

Sea-Doo fitment can vary by year, model, horsepower, carbureted vs. RFI vs. DI, and naturally aspirated vs. supercharged setup.

Check Fitment

What UEW Needs From You

Send This Information

  • Year and model of your Sea-Doo
  • Engine size or horsepower if known
  • Carb, RFI, DI, naturally aspirated, or supercharged
  • Photos of your current engine
  • Engine tag, VIN, or HIN details if available
  • Description of the failure
UEW Advantage

Why Riders Choose UEW

  • Remanufactured replacement engines
  • Core exchange options available
  • Canada & USA shipping support
  • Warranty-backed engine options
  • Fitment help before ordering

Important Installation Notes

Do not install a remanufactured engine into a dirty or failed system. Fuel problems, oil injection faults, air leaks, cooling restrictions, contaminated exhaust, bad injectors, dirty carbs, supercharger debris, electrical faults, or water ingestion can damage a replacement engine quickly. Always inspect and correct the cause of the original failure before startup.

Sea-Doo Engine FAQ

Should I replace the full engine or just the top end?

If the crankshaft, bearings, seals, or lower end condition is unknown, a full replacement engine is usually the safer long-term option. A top end only makes sense when the lower end is confirmed healthy.

Are 951 carb and 951 DI engines the same?

No. The 951 carb and 951 DI applications are different and should not be treated as interchangeable. Always confirm your exact year, model, and engine system before ordering.

Are 1503 naturally aspirated and 1503 supercharged engines the same?

No. They may share a broad engine family, but supporting parts and internal requirements can differ. Always confirm horsepower, model, supercharger setup, and year before ordering.

Can UEW help if my engine is already apart?

Yes. Send photos and details. The core value and replacement options may depend on whether the engine is complete, matching, and rebuildable.

What should I check before installing a replacement engine?

Check fuel delivery, carbs or injectors, oiling system, cooling system, intake boots, crank seals, exhaust, electrical components, supercharger condition when applicable, and the cause of the original failure.

Need Help Finding The Right Sea-Doo Engine?

Send UEW your year, model, engine size, horsepower, and whether your machine is carbureted, RFI, DI, naturally aspirated, or supercharged. Photos of the engine tag or current motor can also help.