I want to get a mower engine and swap onto my little 21" 140cc Craftsman. I let my yard get way too high and went to mow it, but it was barely able to handle it, and I had to push it 2ft, backtrack 3, then go forward slowly.
Anyway, I was looking at a new mower, but they're all 150 or 170 or 163 cc (for the well rated ones. There's several 200ish cc ones for outrageous money, or with like 2 stars.
So, I'm curious. How much does engine CC actually do? Will I notice a difference between my 140cc and a 150? What about 163 or 170? Where would I need to go to buy a bigger engine that I could just swap onto the mower?
I think you need to step back and think a little more clearly.
1. Your current push mower worked fine for your purposes (presumably),
2. until you let your lawn get overgrown, then it gave you problems,
3. leading you to believe that the mower engine is anemic,
4. now you want to replace the engine to get more power.
The fact is, push/walk-behind mowers are not made for overgrown mowing. You can upgrade to a 170cc engine with more torque but you'll still have the same issues in the same situation as any extra "power" will still be anemic for overgrown mowing with a push mower. You are basically overreacting based on one incident, which may not happen again. But even if it does happen again, there is a solution that actually works if using a push mower for overgrown lawns....
Step 1. Raise your cutting height
Step 2. Bag the clippings as you mow
Step 3. Lower the height and mow again, preferably bagging again.
You took the hard way out by using the back-and-forth method. While bagging and mowing twice sounds like the hard way out, mowing 2ft, then backing-up 3ft, then moving forward slowly is the actual hard way out. In fact, you likely spent the same amount of time (if not more) and exerted more effort than using my solution above.
In the future, if you are going to (or have to) continue using a push mower (no shame, I mow about 15 lots with a push mower), the solution going forward is not to change the engine, rather...
1. Don't let your lawn overgrow past the point of a push mower's usability
or
2. If you do let it overgrow (for whatever reason, not judging you), use the solution above.