grumpyunk
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2015
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 104
Briggs & Stratton is in bankruptcy(was a few months ago), and Craftsman has been split into multiple brand 'channels', and is retailed by a few stores. Likely both produce overseas rather than within the USA as was done previously.
Most people that buy at the low end have little interest in the machine they bought, and MOST will likely never change the oil. They may check the level now and again. To spend more on OPE is not in their wheelhouse as they don't care. If it breaks, they throw it out and buy another. Labor costs as most shops makes repair expensive relative to the purchase price. I doubt there is an shop within 100 miles that will rebuild a lawn mower engine, or even likely replace a head gasket or grind the valves.
Given the above, repair parts are unlikely to be readily available. Not that I like it, those are the facts.
Pulsar, if the same company, makes several lines of portable gas-powered inverter generators. Their support team replied to an email request for valve clearance and an image of the carburetor linkage when I asked. I think they were in MS or AL, FWIW. The generators seemed to be equal in quality to HF and multiple others in the 2000W size.
Back when, K-mart sold mowers that sold below $100, including a B&S 3-ish HP, a stamped deck and a staggered front wheel. You could find them in the trash with the O-ring strangling the intake valve and causing lack of compression. Someone did the 5-cent investigation and decided 'beyond repair', and or course I picked it up and found the problem. Repaired with no parts required. That is just an example of how the low-cost mowers were regarded as cheap, throw-aways. Things have not gotten better.
tom
Most people that buy at the low end have little interest in the machine they bought, and MOST will likely never change the oil. They may check the level now and again. To spend more on OPE is not in their wheelhouse as they don't care. If it breaks, they throw it out and buy another. Labor costs as most shops makes repair expensive relative to the purchase price. I doubt there is an shop within 100 miles that will rebuild a lawn mower engine, or even likely replace a head gasket or grind the valves.
Given the above, repair parts are unlikely to be readily available. Not that I like it, those are the facts.
Pulsar, if the same company, makes several lines of portable gas-powered inverter generators. Their support team replied to an email request for valve clearance and an image of the carburetor linkage when I asked. I think they were in MS or AL, FWIW. The generators seemed to be equal in quality to HF and multiple others in the 2000W size.
Back when, K-mart sold mowers that sold below $100, including a B&S 3-ish HP, a stamped deck and a staggered front wheel. You could find them in the trash with the O-ring strangling the intake valve and causing lack of compression. Someone did the 5-cent investigation and decided 'beyond repair', and or course I picked it up and found the problem. Repaired with no parts required. That is just an example of how the low-cost mowers were regarded as cheap, throw-aways. Things have not gotten better.
tom