This is my first post, I have pretty much zero experience with small engine repair, so bear with me... A little backstory: This is my in-law's mower; they got it brand new at the beginning of this year's season. It's a Craftsman M320 with a Briggs engine (104M02-0223-F1). A few months ago, they asked me to look at it because it wouldn't start. I discovered that it had been way overfilled with oil and was hydrolocked. I cleared all the oil out; cleaned the carb; still no start. I replaced the carb and got it running again. I only ran it for 30 minutes and didn't see any signs of oil being sucked into the intake, so I thought it was good.
Fast-forward to yesterday, he tells me its not starting again. The deck is covered in oil again, the air filter and plug are soaked, and there's a pool of oil in the intake. The oil looks thin, milky, and has a slight gas smell to it. I know it wasn't overfilled with oil this time, he wouldn't have had any to add to it, I made sure of that. Coming from a hobbyist automotive background, the cylinder leak down test seems to be good (a hair over 2%) , but the compression seems way low (55 psi in 3 compression strokes), which tells me that the rings are shot. See more here.
What is the professionals' consensus?
1: Tear it down and rebuild it (it seems to be an aluminum block, so it's probably trash).
2: Get a new carb and get it running again to hopefully make it through the rest of the season.
3: Replace the entire engine.
4: Buy them an electric mower.
I'm not afraid to rebuild it and am not terribly concerned with longevity for reasons I won't get into, but keeping in mind low stock of push mowers at local stores this late in the season and the cost of a rebuild, what would you do?
Fast-forward to yesterday, he tells me its not starting again. The deck is covered in oil again, the air filter and plug are soaked, and there's a pool of oil in the intake. The oil looks thin, milky, and has a slight gas smell to it. I know it wasn't overfilled with oil this time, he wouldn't have had any to add to it, I made sure of that. Coming from a hobbyist automotive background, the cylinder leak down test seems to be good (a hair over 2%) , but the compression seems way low (55 psi in 3 compression strokes), which tells me that the rings are shot. See more here.
What is the professionals' consensus?
1: Tear it down and rebuild it (it seems to be an aluminum block, so it's probably trash).
2: Get a new carb and get it running again to hopefully make it through the rest of the season.
3: Replace the entire engine.
4: Buy them an electric mower.
I'm not afraid to rebuild it and am not terribly concerned with longevity for reasons I won't get into, but keeping in mind low stock of push mowers at local stores this late in the season and the cost of a rebuild, what would you do?