Nov-25-2016 01:29 PM
Dec-02-2016 06:05 AM
Dec-02-2016 04:22 AM
road-runner wrote:My tractor has a B&S, my snow thrower a Techumsa, the smaller stuff I don't know but none are Hondas. Maybe it's the gas formula sold in my area in the Chicago N/W suburbs.ron.dittmer wrote:Do you have any Honda engines? Out of my many small engines, two are Honda, one on a generator and one on a tiller. They are the sweetest running engines, and also the only two that routinely get gummed-up carbs.
All this carb-caring, engines running for hours per week effort, I don't get it. What am I missing here?
Dec-02-2016 04:07 AM
Little Outpost wrote:
Dusty,
Will running the generator for all it's got on a couple of drops clear the jets?
Dec-01-2016 09:51 PM
ron.dittmer wrote:Do you have any Honda engines? Out of my many small engines, two are Honda, one on a generator and one on a tiller. They are the sweetest running engines, and also the only two that routinely get gummed-up carbs.
All this carb-caring, engines running for hours per week effort, I don't get it. What am I missing here?
Dec-01-2016 07:23 PM
Dec-01-2016 03:41 PM
Dec-01-2016 11:52 AM
Dec-01-2016 06:46 AM
Dec-01-2016 04:02 AM
Matt_Colie wrote:
I have a better idea.
Figure out how to stop the fuel flow if it gas.
**If it is diesel don't bother.
Fog the engine if it is gas.
**If it is diesel, this is tricky as it will start and run on the fogging oil.
Then, leave it alone. Engines only survive just so many thermal cycles before things start breaking. This is why the old lady that drives a short ways to the market and church has so much car trouble.
As a ship's engineer that came ashore so he could have a family, one thing I learned was that the lacquer that was hydroscopic (so you had to warm up windings) when out at the end of WWII. So, that is no excuse (I don't care what the people that sell parts are telling you.)
Matt
Nov-30-2016 10:00 PM
Nov-30-2016 08:32 PM
Nov-29-2016 02:32 PM
Nov-29-2016 10:51 AM
Nov-29-2016 08:18 AM