hanyoukimura, I like how you post the pictures straight into the message rather than as an attachment. If I didn't see the pictures, I wouldn't have spent time reading every one of the postings and then deciding to join this forum. The pictures made all the difference. It's great to see all these old mowers coming back to useful lives. Very interesting to read as well!
I recognized the 18" Toro in one of your postings and my father-in-law has the same one. The reason he can still use it is because it is so light and easy to maneuver (he's almost 80). The mower's vintage is around 1985-1989, he thinks. I mow his lawn occasionally with it and notice that the emissions are a bit worse than typical -- not sure if that's because of the age or condition of the engine. As a result of your postings, I've come to appreciate this and other old machines more. Thanks for this thread and keep up the great work! :thumbsup:
Glad you enjoy the thread and the photos. I love taking photos (I do it on the side semi-professionally) and I like to document my work to see before and after photos.
sweet, i actually sold every walk behind mower i had ready for sale last weekend, i need more decks!! so much fun. I also donate my scrap to the local scrap guy, he loves the aluminum decks and when i dismantle the engines so he gets full scrap price for them.
Business has been slow lately, first it was due to the dry weather in July and also because I've only had time to fix and have that little Murray for sale.
Today that changed as I moved got two mower running, one of them finished, and moved out 3 mowers and a chainsaw. I've got some space in the garage again!
First up are these two mowers from a month or so ago, a Troy-Bilt 12AV566N711 an d a Craftsman 917.388510. These and a chainsaw were brough to me to work on, none of them worked, one was a friend of his.
The Troy-Bilt was/is in sad shape. It's not that old, yet the paint is peeling badly, it had a nest under the recoil shroud, was filthy, seized blade brake cable, bad gas and filthy air filter as well as rusty spark plug and of course ditty oil. It clearly spends its days left outside, maybe under a pile of dirt, oh knows. With that in mind, I only did so much cosmetically because the paint is so bad.
When I first got it running it sputtered and ran poorly and the self-propelled system was weak. Some through cleaning and a good dose of Seafoam later and it's still not pretty, but it is clean and works great mechanically.
The other one was his.
It also suffered from bad gas, gummed up carburetor, and a general lack of maintenance, but it is at least in decent shape.
Runs great now as well.
The other thing he had was an "Eager Beaver" chainsaw.
Never worked on one before. All I did was empty out the tank and put some fresh mix in (with Seafoam) and adjust the carburetor. Seemed to work pretty well. Cut some wood with it.
After he picked those up today I was feeling productive, so I pulled out my neighbor's cheap Weed Eater that was given to him. I didn't get any photos of this one I don't think, but the issue with it was that the crank was really bent, and oil was in the gas tank and carburetor.
I swapped out the engine for one from the MTD I had kicking around. It burns oil but ran well, he doesn't care. So I swapped the Weed Eater shroud, tank, carburetor, and air cleaner (after cleaning them really well and replacing the diaphragm). Still smokes some but runs great and he was happy.
Finally, I decided to tackle this Poulan that was given to me.
This is one of those interesting case studies that makes you wonder what on earth the owner did to it during its life. I figured it was just missing the shroud from an attempt to fix it and they just threw it out without the shroud, but it must have been off for a while.
On both sides of the engine where the shroud would normally bolt down, were pieces of folded sheet metal, with broken away edges, like someone tried to make a home made shroud or something.
Around front, we see that it has the wrong spark plug, and that the governor spring was stretched out and wrapped around the throttle control spring!
Because I didn't have an extra handy, I did what I could to make this one useable.
I also found that it has the incorrect blade installed crooked on the blade adapter, there was water in the gas tank and carburetor, and the oil came out gray-ish. What a mess!
Its not done and currently the blade is off until I get the right adapter. However, I did get it to fire right up before I removed the blade. Started second pull. Not bad for a neglected and abused machine originally on its way to the scrap heap. Gotta love these little Briggs engines! I've got enough spare parts that this should hopefully looks pretty decent when its finished. I just need to get a new blade brake cable for it.