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Thread: Lawnmower won't start when hot!
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2nd July 2007, 01:14 AM #1Senior Member
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- Dec 2005
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- Western Australia
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Lawnmower won't start when hot!
Not sure where to put this question, so thought I would start here....
I bought a secondhand lawnmower the other day, it is a 11 year old Masport 4 stroke. It goes really well, starts first time, every time, two pumps of the primer and pull the cord, away she goes. Has a bucketload of power, cuts my buffalo lawn with ease.
The problem I have is that it doesn't restart when hot. I have two lawns, and I can't mow one, turn the mower off, and move it to the next lawn, cause it won't restart! I have to idle the mower all the way down the side of the house to the front lawn.
I tested it again today. I pulled it from the shed, primed it, then pulled the cord, bang, away she goes! Let it idle for 10 minutes, turn it off, and it wouldn't start.
Any ideas as to what is wrong? Or and advice as to further tests I can do to establish what is wrong?
Cheers
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2nd July 2007, 07:25 AM #2Awaiting Email Confirmation
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- Jan 2007
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change the spark plug with a new one. I used to keep a spare cold plug in my pocket.
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2nd July 2007, 07:49 AM #3
Sounds like a problem cars used to have when I was young. We called it vapour lock. Car would get hot, turn it off, wouldn't start back. Something to do with the carburettor (sp?). Wait 5 minutes and it would start right up. Mow one lawn, go have a pint and then start her up again.
Cheers,
Bob
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2nd July 2007, 08:49 AM #4
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2nd July 2007, 09:16 AM #5
The plug, yes, I have had that on a Honda motor.
Also try pulling the air filter out, if it starts, get a new one.
I had that on my 4 stroke mower a couple of months ago, a blocked air filter acts like you have the choke on.Cliff.
If you find a post of mine that is missing a pic that you'd like to see, let me know & I'll see if I can find a copy.
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2nd July 2007, 12:59 PM #6Senior Member
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- Dec 2005
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- Western Australia
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Cheers guys.
At least now I have a few places to start.
1. New spark plug
2. Clean air filter
3. have pint
I am errrr 'receiving' a Briggs and Stratton repair manual on-line at the moment, so I will have a read of that and see if it refers to tuning the carburettor at all.
I have also downloaded the engine manual from the B & S website, but it was not very helpful, it contained mostly instructions on changing the oil, fuel to use, etc, not really useful when something actually goes wrong!
Cheers for the help so far, keep the suggestions coming.
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2nd July 2007, 01:03 PM #7
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2nd July 2007, 01:25 PM #8
If changing the plug & cleaning the air filter doesn't fix it try a dose of "start Ya Bastard". If that doesn't do the job its likely to be a defective magneto coil suffering heat induced insulation breakdown.
I've got a chainsaw that does exactly the same thing so I just have smoko between logs.
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2nd July 2007, 01:52 PM #9GOLD MEMBER
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- Aug 2004
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- Perth WA
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11 years old... is it meant to run on leaded or un-leaded ? Wouldn't mind betting you're getting a build-up in the plug gap that shorts it out.
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2nd July 2007, 02:05 PM #10Senior Member
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2nd July 2007, 02:07 PM #11Senior Member
- Join Date
- Dec 2005
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- Western Australia
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2nd July 2007, 02:14 PM #12
Briggs and Stratton dont usually get repaired, they get thrown away.
Make sure there is enough oil in the sump, some stationery engines have a dry start feature which means they wont start when the oil level is low. They will start first off because all the oil has drained back into the sump and the sensor reads that the sump has sufficient oil for it to start, when you run the motor and switch it off it takes a while for the oil to drain back into the sump so the sensor is telling the motor the oil level is too low to start. Keeping your oil level up to the "full" mark will overcome this problem. Failing that, as suggested, you may be using the wrong spark plug causing it to overheat.Reality is no background music.
Cheers John
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2nd July 2007, 02:18 PM #13GOLD MEMBER
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- Aug 2004
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- Perth WA
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If you're using un-leaded then it should be right.
I'd take the plug out whilst still hot to see if its got a build-up in the point gap that is actually connecting both to gether.
My reason for suggeting this is that I use to use leaded fuel in the mower and was getting this build-up in the gap. I changed to un-leaded and the problem solvered.
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2nd July 2007, 03:39 PM #14
My simple solution to this is to whip the air filter off and tip a small amount of fuel down it's neck. Start it, and then screw the filter back on while it's idling.
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2nd July 2007, 04:06 PM #15
Echnidna could be right here, to check the coil pull the spark plug lead off and see if you get a spark when you pull the starter by holding the terminal close to the frame, if not let it cool down for half an hour and check for spark again if it has come back the chances are the coil is faulty. If you don't want to hold the spark plug lead attach the spark plug and sit it on the metal frame.If it goes against the grain, it's being rubbed the wrong way!
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