thanks for your reply. , uses a little oil , was wondering about oil additive for the rings ? Almost always starts within 1-2 pulls.
, seems like it could run a little more RPM , any tricks there ?
Well for RPMs there should be a spring attached to a tab that controls the carb throttle. If you bend the tap the RPMs will adjust. I don't remember which way you bend it right now but a little experimentation will help.
Here's a picture of the spring and tab. I have the carburetor and fan shroud off but the spring and linkage are there.
What you do is start the engine and tie the handle down with something so it runs when you aren't holding it. Be careful of course. Then get pliers and bend the tab. If you bend it one direction and the RPMs increase then keep going that way. If they drop, then go the other way. Do that till you find the right RPM you want. Be warned though that mower engines shouldn't rev much past 3000 for safety reasons, and they're usually set at 2900. I personally don't have a tachometer and I doubt you do so play it by ear. Kinda find a known good mower and pitch match the RPMs. That's what I do. It's not the space shuttle, it'll be fine if it's close to 3000. And of course be very careful when doing this because the blades are spinning and you can't stop it quickly with the handle clamped down. The air cleaner might be in the way so you can temporarily remove it while doing this.
As far as the oil burning I'm facing a similar situation. I recently came upon a free pressure washer with a B/S Quantum 6.5 and all it needed was a carb cleaning. Nice find, but the owner hadn't checked the oil and it was half water half sludge, so the engine is worn pretty badly. It knocks slightly and burns oil quickly, to the point where I have to add 2 oz or so every couple hours. I don't feel like rebuilding the engine because I have a lot of spare engine blocks I could thrown on if it goes bad, and because they're not particularly valuable or expensive. So what I've done is put in some Lucas oil stabilizer to see if it helps. Some say it doesn't, some say it does. In reality it will probably just thicken the oil and that may slow burning or mask wear. Not a fix per say, but helpful. I'd say you don't have much to lose from trying additives but don't expect miracles. If you're dedicated you can tear down the motor and get new rings from Briggs, they do sell them. In fact if you have access to machining you can bore the cylinder out .01 or even .02 inches, hone the cylinder, and buy oversized rings/piston head which Briggs shockingly sells for these tiny engines. That would be the true correct way to repair this engine, but it's really not worth the time/cost unless you have the access to the needed equipment. or are really interested in it. Good luck keep us updated!