Did the engine make any noise when it stopped running? Is there a mouse nest under the engine housing? Try placing a 5/8" 6-point socket on the bolt at the bottom of the clutch and see if you can rotate the engine in either direction. It happens. Two weeks ago, I had a customer with a Cub Cadet XT1 and a Kohler 5400 with 138 hrs. on the meter, and it seized dead solid for no apparent reason. It is very unusual, but it does happen. In the end, he chose to replace the engine with a drop-in, considering the engine cost with labor was less than one-third the cost of a machine replacement. I serviced that machine back in April with Valvoline 10w30 full synthetic and a Wix 51348 filter (Napa Gold). That's the first of the newer Kohler KT series engines I've seen fail with no outside reason. I contacted the local Kohler rep to ask for courtesy assistance. He came to my shop to verify, took an oil sample and two days later he (Kohler) offered to provide a new drop-in engine at "dealer cost" ($632.00), fair enough, given it was 4 years old. He picked up the failed engine last Thursday to ship it out for engineering analysis.Engine has been maintained but recently locked up. Any suggestions?
Can you provide make and model of engine and equipment in your posting? My crystal ball is out for repairs (LOL).Engine has been maintained but recently locked up. Any suggestions?
I have not heard back from the Kohler rep, maybe I won't. But he was very fair, and part of his decision was that I had the service records as well as the low hours.Can you provide make and model of engine and equipment in your posting? My crystal ball is out for repairs (LOL).
Has any inspection been performed?
Sudden failure with noise before locking up?
I have not heard back from the Kohler rep, maybe I won't. But he was very fair, and part of his decision was that I had the service records as well as the low hours.
I am sorry to hear it. I would get in touch with your dealer and request the Kohler representative's phone number so I could give him a call. Attempting it will not harm you. Lubrication failure is nearly always the root cause of such a catastrophic disaster. Second possibility, running above rated RPM's.Took engine apart, camshaft, piston rod and governor trashed.
How old? Ever clean the cooling fins? Ever check valves? Do you check the oil on a flat surface prior to every mow? Do you use multi grade oil? If so stop it unless your manual says otherwise. SAE 30w is your friend.Engine has been maintained but recently locked up. Any suggestions?