Considering the shear number of the 21, 28, 31, and 33 the failure rate is quite low. And for it is mainly the 31 series with a few 33 series. Kinda strange that I don't the same failure in the 21 and 28 that uses the same camshaft. THe only repeat failure I had was the cheap Chinese knock off I tried.
I noticed on the latest 793880 camshafts that an engineering change has been made. They have hour glassed the ACR pin so that the lifters are now contacting it less.
Yes, percentage-wise it's quite low and probably quite acceptable to their company decision makers. But numerically, it's still too high!
In fact, anything over one or two is too high because they didn't have this problem before and then they started having the problem SO should have fixed it.
They didn't -at least not for a long time and maybe they still haven't.
It's hard to trust Briggs, thinking a new part may have improved the design because they have a history of changing their part numbers all the time even though it's the exact same item and not improved.
I don't have a lot of faith in their replacement parts because I've seen too many almost brand new Factory ones fail.
It doesn't seem to matter how young or old the thing is.
I've seen them fail under 10 hours and seen them fail anywhere up to 100 hours without any rhyme or reason.
Then I've seen some be closer to 200 hours when they fail.
Most mowers in my area don't get over 230 to 260 hours on them because the people end up replacing the entire mower by then because going from the dates of manufacture and the hour meters on the mini mowers I serviced over the decades, they tend to put under 25 hours per year on their mower with only a few getting close to 35.
I routinely did the math and it ended up being under 25 hours per year. So somewhere in that 12 to 14 year range with still quite low hours on it, they would end up upgrading to a new mower.
When I purchased the last camshaft I did notice Briggs had changed this particular one from there standard six digit part number to a part number much longer with a lot of nines in it from what I remember.
I thought I would give them the benefit of the doubt and hope they had changed this part along with a numbering system so I made sure I got one of those and not one of the other replacements with the six digit number that were readily available.
Don't know if that helped or not and I didn't actually notice any difference on this particular part versus the old one when I installed it like you mentioned on the redesign.
I will maintain it's a crap design though and way too delicate.
Mostly I will blame the little plastic bushing because they don't believe plastic has any place inside of any engine.
I can't think of an application where I would rather or just have to put plastic inside of an engine because there should always be another material that can be used and I feel that in almost every application the other material would be superior.
The pin of the spring are delicate enough but I think they would manage if it weren't for the plastic bushing but I know for a fact we could redesign and improve this system without a whole lot of effort.
Fact that they haven't done this ticks me off.
So there are way too many because even one is way too many.