Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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solara
Location: Boston
Joined: Jun 16, 2004
Points: 252
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Do you?
Original Message Jan 20, 2005 12:11 pm |
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a) when shutting off the blower (for the day, not the season), first turn off the gas so the gas in the carb is expended? b) if no primer bulb, when starting, do anything other than placing throttle on high and opening the choke? Thanx. (BTW, 2 - 3 inches in boston which i moved (easily) w/ the jacobsen snowburst as i flooded the toro 826.)
2004-2005 Ariens 11528LE Jacobsen snow-burst
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Richie
Bring On The White Stuff
Location: Long Island, New York
Joined: Dec 12, 2003
Points: 562
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Re: Do you?
Reply #1 Jan 20, 2005 12:31 pm |
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Hi Solara, As a habit, after every time I've finished with the blower, I shut off the fuel valve and allow the blower to expend whatever is left in the bowl of the carb. I really think it's good practice, but everyone is different. It really isn't an inconvenience to me because I always allow the machine to run for a short while anyway, which is supposed to be good for a snowblower anyway. As for starting your machine, unless it is an older snowblower, prior to the EPA mandating these lean carbs, I'd try not throttling it up to the maximum position. If you don't have the instruction manual as a guide, I'd experiment with it to see where the sweet spot is. Hope this helps.
Richie
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JohnEDavies
Joined: Sep 7, 2004
Points: 177
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Re: Do you?
Reply #2 Jan 20, 2005 12:39 pm |
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I don't turn off my fuel valve until the engine is shut down after a 2 minute cool down. But I _always_ use Stabil so I don't have any worries about carburetor deposits. I don't like to let the engine run full rpm until it has warmed up a minute or two. I think it is a bit hard on the internal parts. (Your car doesn't race at 3600 rpm when you first start it.) I usually go full choke and 1/2 throttle; then immediately 1/2 choke and throttle back to a fast idle for a while. I rarely need to use the primer since I don't let the carb run dry. Every machine is different. Experiment and do what seems to work for you. John
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Dave___in___CT
Deliberate often... ...decide once...
Location: West-Central Connecticut
Joined: Sep 17, 2002
Points: 3159
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Re: Do you?
Reply #4 Jan 20, 2005 2:12 pm |
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Hi... I do not shut the fuel valve off... it is he best thing to do though... I should start doing this... Two weeks ago I noticed the plastic fuel filter was broke and dripping fuel... ! My machine stays outside under a roof... and not in/near the house... I would not run the carb dry... and for starting... I use 1/4-1/2 throttle to start then ease it to an idle for a few minutes... then gradually increase the RPM... Dave...
Whether you think you can or you can't... you're right.Henry Ford BCS Tractor & snowblower
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Highwind
Despite the high cost of living, have you noticed how it remains so popular.
Joined: Jan 13, 2004
Points: 985
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Re: Do you?
Reply #9 Jan 20, 2005 9:43 pm |
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Haven't run it dry after a snow blowing session, as I have Bobby_Ps Pri-G in it and it is so cold that I'm not worried about fuel deterioration or carb gumming. Only have a single throttle control which when in choke position sets the throttle to high speed. When I come off choke she'll be at full speed, so I'll put the throttle back to low, and warm up the hydrostatic drive before backing it out of the garage. Summer engines I run dry as part of the shutdown, even though they have stabilizer in them.
Honda stable: HS 724 snowblower; HRS216 lawnmower; BF2 UWWW; 5 HP, 2200 psi/2.9 GPM pressure washer. Electric: BV2500 B&D Leaf Hog/snow duster; old 12" Weedeater.
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18Degrees
Joined: Jan 19, 2005
Points: 111
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Re: Do you?
Reply #10 Jan 21, 2005 12:31 am |
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My garage is above 32degrees,but I Still leat it warm up before hittin' the snow. For cool down I-lower the RPM shut off gas sweep the snow off with long handled broom then drive into garage before gas runs out in carberator shut off smile that I own a snowthower. 18Degrees
This message was modified Jan 21, 2005 by 18Degrees
18 Degree driveway - 928 Honda track drive - Fertilizer spreader for dispensing salt
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