KE4AVB wrote:bgsengine wrote:Check for cooling issues, you may want to observe the engine in operation on location or determine where it is in operation and what it is being used on.
Most likely cooling is the main problem but having to this every week is getting a little frustrating.
They are being use in open nursery fields to clear between the rows and around the plants. Anything out there can be from rocks to shrub stumps. I have cleaned from under the recoil starter numerous times which may be main source of the problem. The bolts are the original ones. I post a picture of what have found under the covers in the past which is the reason why they burn up one unit. That is nothing but grass and seeds; not a mouse bed.
If they are like the one in the picture, THOSE engines are *NOTORIOUS* for head bolts getting loose and blown head gaskets especially around the exhaust valve area - Important to use OEM head gasket there. Those 3 longer bolts, as Skywatcher points out, go around the exhaust valve corner
Back when these were most common lawnmower engines, we kept minimum stock of 10 head gaskets at all times - There were some weeks where I'd do those head gaskets as many as 6 a day. Even when there was no cooling issue, the exhaust corner is a hot spot for them and until Briggs started using the graphite layer gaskets, the metal clad gaskets we constantly blowing out and bolts getting loose
Torque spec - While the spec is 140 In-Lb, we had just done them up to 200 In-Lb dry (no lubrication on threads or bolt heads) and never had a comeback... It's been much too long ago but I do recall a Briggs school (Back in the day when everything was paper and service schools were held everywhere within an easy 1 hour drive max... Computers were a $5,000 investment and the internet was still a figment of Al Gore's Imagination.) that a presenter advised a 200 In-Lbs torque spec on 5/16" head bolts and we'd done it that way ever since with no issues.
With OHV Engines we still follow the book specs, but the L-heads, we'd always seen head gasket problems that were fixed for keeps with the 200 In-Lb spec.. And then again, *KEEP IN MIND* that was *before* the graphite layer gaskets started being used... So, I tend to lean towards Sky's 15 Ft Lb spec with new style gaskets. (Cant remember the last time we ever had to replace an L-head gasket in the last 5 years.. not too common anymore.. so I can't think of a time we have deviated from Book specs in all that time, now.. )
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)