Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Quality of the Tecumseh HSK850
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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trouts2
Location: Marlboro MA
Joined: Dec 8, 2007
Points: 1328
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Quality of the Tecumseh HSK850
Original Message Feb 3, 2012 1:29 pm |
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Borat, Very interesting post I read today (from 2009) was signed this way by T-Man. P.S. I LOVE the HSK850 and TVS/TVXL840 2-cycle engine. One of the strongest engines ever built, and very simple and powerful in its design. T-Man was a technical guy for Tecumseh for many years and miles above anyone on the net. His depth of knowledge about Tecumseh engines is astonishing. The HSK870 seems like an interesting engine. I've never come across one. Have you?
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trouts2
Location: Marlboro MA
Joined: Dec 8, 2007
Points: 1328
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Re: Quality of the Tecumseh HSK850
Reply #9 Feb 4, 2012 7:04 pm |
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Your HSK850-8324C is not listed but referenced. It is used as a base for two other models, the HSK850-8334C and 8334D. Both are your engine plus a governor spring, ground wire, blower housing and carburetor. (There were no TC139’s listen in my manual from 2001 and 2. It looks like the designation did not come into being at that time). What apparently is a your HSK850 model as a base with those changes to make the 8334C and D may end up having the same carb and possibly the other parts. There’s no relying on the manf’s manual or various exploded views on the net. They are mostly reliable but specific changes may not make it to the manuals as I've seen a number of times. Plus, the HSK850-8334C once made up as referenced from your engine may have “attachments” like as listed in partstree views. Those “attachments” could be a carb change on top of a carb change from the base build of your engine. Generally the additions cover an optional electric start, recoil and different carburetor. The marketing guys sell then spec to the manufacturing department and may be a step ahead of the drafting and documentation departments, very common. The manuals from MTD for my 5.5hp single stage list it as coming with an HSK850 with no dash number. On the machine is a TC139-8336G. Since mine TC139 is a 5.5hp and yours a 5hp I looked for differences. The only thing I could find was they used different flywheels. ? What is weird is my 5.5 uses the same flywheel as your 850 5hp Craftsman. ? Mine probably uses a different carb but no telling unless you got the numbers off the carb. My TC engine is also a 2006. Possibly your Craftsman is a sleeper 5.5. It would be with a jet tweak. Given that your Craftsman has those similar parts you mentioned above all you lack for an 870 upgrade is a...... possibly spring, carb and muffler. The spring is nothing, a carb a drilling and the muffler $73 online and your in there. Pricy but your machine would be approaching a $1000 Ariens. Plus, the augers on the Ariens are probably slower than your Craftsman. Your Craftsman might might keep up with or beat a 870 powered Ariens. It would have more torque at the auger tips, more foot pounds and so many you'd have leg pounds. The boratified $1000 Craftsman.
Your HSK850-8324C is not listed but referenced. It is used as a base for two other models, the HSK850-8334C and 8334D. Both are your engine plus a governor spring, ground wire, blower housing and carburetor. (There were no TC139’s listen in my manual from 2001 and 2. It looks like the designation did not come into being at that time). What apparently is a your HSK850 model as a base with those changes to make the 8334C and D may end up having the same carb and possibly the other parts. There’s no relying on the manf’s manual or various exploded views on the net. They are mostly reliable but specific changes may not make it to the manuals as I've seen a number of times. Plus, the HSK850-8334C once made up as referenced from your engine may have “attachments” like as listed in partstree views. Those “attachments” could be a carb change on top of a carb change from the base build of your engine. Generally the additions cover an optional electric start, recoil and different carburetor. The marketing guys sell then spec to the manufacturing department and may be a step ahead of the drafting and documentation departments, very common. The manuals from MTD for my 5.5hp single stage list it as coming with an HSK850 with no dash number. On the machine is a TC139-8336G. Since mine TC139 is a 5.5hp and yours a 5hp I looked for differences. The only thing I could find was they used different flywheels. ? What is weird is my 5.5 uses the same flywheel as your 850 5hp Craftsman. ? Mine probably uses a different carb but no telling unless you got the numbers off the carb. My TC engine is also a 2006. Possibly your Craftsman is a sleeper 5.5. It would be with a jet tweak. Given that your Craftsman has those similar parts you mentioned above all you lack for an 870 upgrade is a...... possibly spring, carb and muffler. The spring is nothing, a carb a drilling and the muffler $73 online and your in there. Pricy but your machine would be approaching a $1000 Ariens. Plus, the augers on the Ariens are probably slower than your Craftsman. Your Craftsman might might keep up with or beat a 870 powered Ariens. It would have more torque at the auger tips, more foot pounds and so many you'd have leg pounds. The boratified $1000 Craftsman.
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This message was modified Feb 4, 2012 by trouts2
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trouts2
Location: Marlboro MA
Joined: Dec 8, 2007
Points: 1328
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Re: Quality of the Tecumseh HSK850
Reply #14 Feb 7, 2012 8:29 am |
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Borat, Saw your T-man post and posted there myself. The only difference I can see in a 5hp version of the HSK850 and the HSK870 is the muffler. The 5hp uses 390325. The HSK870 uses 390343. I can't find anything about these mufflers other than prices. The difference may be the finish like galvanized or some fit thing but it could be the 343 is tuned. It's too much for me to imagine Ariens reworking an SS522 body to be a SS722 and charging $2-400 more for it with an unmodified HSK850 used in the 5hp version. Ariens in the past has used a tuned muffler to boost a HSSK50 to HSSK55. They have made engine changes to stock versions often in the past like special cranks.
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