2 stroke longevity - how many hours

jkp62

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Bringing this up just for the hell of it : looking over some old posts , and came across this quote : " Your average 4 stroke motor was rated at 500 engine hours, were the 2 stroke motors were rated at 200-250 engine hours of life expectancy before requiring major repair " I`m a big 2 cycle fan . I had a Toro mower with Suzuki motor , from 1989 until 2011 , 5/8 acre , 70 -75 minutes each time . Averaging 26 per season , I figure around 700 hours , and was still running when I sold . I`m thinking my Duraforce Lawn Boys capable of the same . Any thoughts ?
 

Tiger Small Engine

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Bringing this up just for the hell of it : looking over some old posts , and came across this quote : " Your average 4 stroke motor was rated at 500 engine hours, were the 2 stroke motors were rated at 200-250 engine hours of life expectancy before requiring major repair " I`m a big 2 cycle fan . I had a Toro mower with Suzuki motor , from 1989 until 2011 , 5/8 acre , 70 -75 minutes each time . Averaging 26 per season , I figure around 700 hours , and was still running when I sold . I`m thinking my Duraforce Lawn Boys capable of the same . Any thoughts ?
It depends, upon a lot of things. How good is the engine to begin with? How is the equipment used and how often? How is the equipment maintained? Sometimes equipment will have a sticker on it with an hour rating. That is how long it is rated to stay within EPA standards. Lucky to get 3-5 years out of a cheap 2-stroke trimmer. Not uncommon for 30-40 year old Stihl chainsaws (2-stroke) to come in the shop.
 
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RevB

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Two strokes generally get a bad rap because of oil type and oil mixing issues. A quality air cooled two stroke oil is necessary and the ratio is important as well. As background I've flown two stroke powered Ultralight aircraft for over 30 years. The Rotax guys that didn't have oil injection always thought that more oil in the mix was better.....all they did was shorten the time between overhauls, coke up the top of the pistons, fill the exhaust port with carbon, foul the plugs and lock the rings in place. I went with a 100:1 mix for all my engines, not just UL but trimmers, chain saws, blowers, etc., and the plugs all looked like four stroke engines and never needed to be replaced. Rings stayed free, crosshatch was very visible after 800 hours and no decarbonizing was ever needed. The amount of oil is vanishingly small because of the roller and needle bearings in modern two strokes. If this were a really old plain bearing engine you'd need way more oil in the mix than 100:1 could provide.The brand of 100:1 oil is not important as long as it has a good name behind it. The other advantage in my case was full instrumentation for EGT and CHT. Two strokes do not like getting a too lean mixture. In your case it's simply learning to listen to the engine as you screw in the high speed needle to hear it break over from a four stroke to a two stroke. It's a learned skill that isn't magic, just a practiced ear.
 

Smithsonite

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Really subjective, since it depends entirely on how the equipment was cared for.

That said, as a lifelong mechanic, my 2-strokes last many times longer than the internet would have you believe. I can tune them by ear (whether it's a chainsaw or string trimmer, or a dirt bike / ATV or my paramotor), and they will all last forever.

I've been trimming my 2.5 acres for 22 years on the same Echo SRM-210 trimmer that has only had 1 carburetor (& fuel lines) and 1 spark plug replacement in that timeframe. I'm not gentle on any of my engines - they're there to get the job done as fast as possible. Around my yard it sees everything from low-RPM, light load trimming to full-throttle, chernobyl-temperature "brushhogging" through foot tall grass in the middle of July. Every time I use it I go through a full tank. Sometimes more. I'd wager it will still have well over 100 PSI compression ice cold.

Everything gets mixed with Amsoil Saber at 100:1, except the paramotor. That gets mixed at 66:1 (that was a number a more experienced instructor said he used for his paramotor school rigs for many years with success down in smoking hot LA, so that's what I've been using).

The paramotor has about 30 hours on it, but during climb out, I regularly nudge 400° cylinder head temps.









Oh, and another 2-stroke I forgot to mention. This one has 7k+ miles on it since a complete overhaul. Still runs like the day I first started it. Starts 3 kicks cold whether it sat for 8 hours or 8 months, and always 1 kick warm.

This one gets Amsoil Dominator since it's oil injected. I feel Saber is a bit too heavy for the injection pump and could cause issues.









 
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mcspeed

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I have a 20 year old Stihl line trimmer that works well. Was used heavily on a mountain bike trail building project for 5 years. Now maintains my 3/4 acres and occasionally the HOA common area. It’s been used hard in triple digit temps and has has a carbide table saw blade for trimming saplings and branches…..maybe abused is a better word LOL.

If you buy good quality, it will last. The junk sold in big box stores will not last.
 

srwa

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Can't believe what I'm reading concerning the 2 stroke engine. In my extremely humble opinion the 2 cycle came right outta the pit of hell. And to fly using a 2 stroke I would need 4 parashots.

Have to admit my Stihl 026 chainsaw, over 25 years old, still starts on the first to 3rd. pull. The Germans know how to build stuff.

The oil to fuel ratio is critical in a 2 cycle.......and DO NOT leave the fuel mixture in the machine for an extended period.

Had a Ryobi 4cycle weed eater that would cut down a redwood tree. Lasted over 25 years. And, if I treated a human as bad as I treated that weed eater I'd still be in jail.
 

Smithsonite

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They are the simplest, lightest, cheapest, and most powerful engines for their size. Zero downsides in my eyes. As a mechanic, I wish everything I owned was a 2-stroke, even the cars and truck! A V8 2-stroke would be an absolute powerhouse.
 

RevB

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They are the simplest, lightest, cheapest, and most powerful engines for their size. Zero downsides in my eyes. As a mechanic, I wish everything I owned was a 2-stroke, even the cars and truck! A V8 2-stroke would be an absolute powerhouse.
You want a Detroit 12v-71T diesel. But if stuck in a V8 then a 8V-71TA or TTA.
 

mcspeed

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Can't believe what I'm reading concerning the 2 stroke engine. In my extremely humble opinion the 2 cycle came right outta the pit of hell. And to fly using a 2 stroke I would need 4 parashots.

Have to admit my Stihl 026 chainsaw, over 25 years old, still starts on the first to 3rd. pull. The Germans know how to build stuff.

The oil to fuel ratio is critical in a 2 cycle.......and DO NOT leave the fuel mixture in the machine for an extended period.

Had a Ryobi 4cycle weed eater that would cut down a redwood tree. Lasted over 25 years. And, if I treated a human as bad as I treated that weed eater I'd still be in jail.
I have a John Deere chain saw I bought new over 40 years ago. Never drained the fuel or used additive. Starts and runs like new.
 
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