Quizzes & Puzzles29 mins ago
Lawn Mower Problem
Morning all. My petrol mower has developed a problem. I fill the tank and after mowing the lawn the tank is empty. Previously the full tank lasted for many cuts. There is no sign of petrol in the garage where the mower is kept nor is there a trail of petrol on the grass. Mysterious! Any suggestion/ideas very welcome. Thanks.
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In no particular order
1. Full tank, Fuel tap closed, filler cap tightened. Check level via dipstick, recheck hourly until satisfied no leak in the tank or cap.
2. Fuel tap open. Visual check for leaks in the tap structure.
3. Ditto, checking for fuel line splits.
Having eliminated fuel leakage, the loss could be just high fuel consumption
1. Spark plug fouled or wrong gap, or not tight on the threads?
2. Is it 2-stroke or 4-stroke?
2b. Lubrication method, if 2-stroke?
3. Engine tune up (£££, last resort)
Far more likely is wear and tear or fouling in the bearings of the transmission and blades - resistance to rotation which you might be able to feel. Cleaning and lubrication might sort that out.
Otherwise, someone is siphoning your tank, when your back is turned.
In no particular order
1. Full tank, Fuel tap closed, filler cap tightened. Check level via dipstick, recheck hourly until satisfied no leak in the tank or cap.
2. Fuel tap open. Visual check for leaks in the tap structure.
3. Ditto, checking for fuel line splits.
Having eliminated fuel leakage, the loss could be just high fuel consumption
1. Spark plug fouled or wrong gap, or not tight on the threads?
2. Is it 2-stroke or 4-stroke?
2b. Lubrication method, if 2-stroke?
3. Engine tune up (£££, last resort)
Far more likely is wear and tear or fouling in the bearings of the transmission and blades - resistance to rotation which you might be able to feel. Cleaning and lubrication might sort that out.
Otherwise, someone is siphoning your tank, when your back is turned.
If their is no sign of a fuel leak .. the most likely fault is your choke may be stuck closed. This would cause the fuel consumption to rise dramatically.
You haven't said what type or model of lawnmower you have, that would help.
In the vast majority of cases it would mean simply removing the air filter and squirting some carburettor cleaner into the choke chamber. The choke flap should move easily.
You haven't said what type or model of lawnmower you have, that would help.
In the vast majority of cases it would mean simply removing the air filter and squirting some carburettor cleaner into the choke chamber. The choke flap should move easily.
You may wish to (or have someone do it for you) check the security of the bolt on carburetor. Thing is (it's probably held on to the engine by 4 bolts) if it's loose, the engine will still often work, but drawing excessive air, it will draw excessive fuel as well.
There will be staining at the base of the carb where fuel is leaking out, but not much else will be telling, except, perhaps, dieseling, which is the engine continuing to run (roughly) after shutting it off by usual means. This is caused by the engine continuing to draw fuel/air mixture even though the shut-off mechanism is turned "off"...
There will be staining at the base of the carb where fuel is leaking out, but not much else will be telling, except, perhaps, dieseling, which is the engine continuing to run (roughly) after shutting it off by usual means. This is caused by the engine continuing to draw fuel/air mixture even though the shut-off mechanism is turned "off"...
Briggs and Stratton service guide here
http:// www.bri ggsands tratton .com/us /en/sup port/fa qs/engi ne-prob lem-sol ving-ti ps
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