Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Avoid the Most Common Damage & Wear done to Any Snowblower . . .
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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New_Yorker
Preach the Gospel always, use words when necessary
Location: Long Island, NY
Joined: Nov 26, 2010
Points: 219
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Avoid the Most Common Damage & Wear done to Any Snowblower . . .
Original Message Dec 10, 2011 10:37 am |
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Most Common Damage Done to any and all snowblowers is NOT preparing the engine and machine for the summer months. The most necessary part of this is to prevent the unused engines one engine piston rings from rusting themself to the cylinder wall. The solution is simple and easy if you posess the tools and the technical know how to change a spark plug. Go to a local drugstore and buy a plastic syringe, tell them you need it to feed liquid medicine to a sick cat. Then go home and remove the spark plug from the engine on your snowblower. Fill the syringe with ordinary clean fresh motor oil, and empty it into the engine cylinder, then pull the starter cord a few times to distribute the oil on the cylinder walls and the piston rings, then replace the spark plug. Now Pull the cord slowly until it provides the maximum resistance, and then stop pulling. This will effectively have closed all the engine valves and will keep the warm moist air of summer from getting into the engine cylinder. This must be done every year once the threat of snow is gone. April Fool's Day is a good day to remember if you've done such chores. The other things are less important since they will not be so damaging, but drain all the gas out of the tank, the carburetor, and the lines. Cover the machine with a plastic cover that allows air movement, like a piece of woven plastic or most housewraps, so long as yoy store the snowblower in a garage and out of the sun. Remember that snowblowers have no air filters so it is common for moisture-water to be injested during a snow storm. For this reason I put the machine in the garage and run it until the gas runs out once I have shut off the fuel line. My old snowblower required that I install an In-Line fuel shut-off valve because the $ 1100.00 bucks I paid wasn't sufficient for MTD to have included one when they built my Sears Craftsman Snowblower. So if your engine has no fuel shut off, you too should install one yourself. Oh, and always use gas that has sufficient fuel stabilizer in it, and always use fuel that is less thyan six months in the can even if it does have stabilizer in it. Thenattempting to start the snowblower when you awake to the blizzard won't throw you into a state of panic.
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New_Yorker
Preach the Gospel always, use words when necessary
Location: Long Island, NY
Joined: Nov 26, 2010
Points: 219
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Re: Avoid the Most Common Damage & Wear done to Any Snowblower . . .
Reply #30 Dec 11, 2011 1:33 pm |
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I have to Laugh at the negative remarks when I did no more than post a basic instruction that was part of the owners manual for every snowblower I ever owned. Snow blowers don't have air filters as a rule, they do injest water and moisture in normal operation to a far greater degree than say a lawn mower, and the rust does get to the piston rings after years of improper storage. Oh, and small engine repir is not only for you Einstein's, normal people do it all the time, we just read the manuals before we do, unlike you.
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RedOctobyr
Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282
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Re: Avoid the Most Common Damage & Wear done to Any Snowblower . . .
Reply #33 Dec 11, 2011 8:16 pm |
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New_Yorker, you're right, snow blowers do operate in a different environment, and I'm sure they do ingest some of the snow that's in the air. But, at the same time, the combustion chamber is awfully hot. I have to expect that any moisture that gets sucked in, even if it's just as you're shutting down, boils off/evaporates very quickly, and doesn't hang around. Moisture that comes in during storage, especially if outdoors in a damp environment, with the engine's valves/ports open, may be a different story, of course. Though my experience (for what it's worth) hasn't shown any problems from that.
I realize you're just helping to clarify what's in the manuals. And I'd agree there's no harm in doing it. I'd add a fuel shutoff to my machine if it didn't already have one. I will be adding a fuel filter, since that strikes me as another very inexpensive way to avoid problems caused by a piece something in your gas, which could leave you with a dead machine during a blizzard. If the plastic Tecumseh Snow King tanks (for, say, the 8 hp engines) have built-in fuel filters, that would be good to know, before I add one myself.
But I think there are a number of other fairly-easy aspects of snowblower maintenance (besides oiling the cylinders) which will also help make the machine last longer. Such as lubricating the appropriate parts of the machine, spinning the augers on the shaft (with the shear bolts removed) every once in a while to ensure they haven't rusted in-place (ideally also greasing them, if possible), replacing the scraper bar and skid shoes before they wear out and you start grinding away the underside of the bucket, etc.
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jrtrebor
Location: Michigan - 3 hours north of Chicago on the lake
Joined: Feb 10, 2010
Points: 539
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Re: Avoid the Most Common Damage & Wear done to Any Snowblower . . .
Reply #35 Dec 12, 2011 12:14 am |
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I would think that one reason that marine engines need to be fogged is because most engine are in a fairly closed and confined space. Either below decks or under an engine cover that is exposed to the bilge area. Unless the bilge area is kept completely dry the whole time the boat is in storage. The engine will be sitting in a damp, trapped air space environment. With no air movement. Condensation is also a real issue. Cold steel surrounded by warm moist air will condensate like crazy. Just some thoughts. If fogging small engines was really important. Then lawn mower engines should be fogged as well. They spend most of their lives sitting. There is never any moisture in an engine cylinder after it has been running and then shut down. It doesn't really matter how much snow it may have sucked in. The heat from the engine will vaporize any snow or moisture that may have entered.
This message was modified Dec 12, 2011 by jrtrebor
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