This morning I got into checking out the old Lawn Boy mowers.
One of them is so old it's before they painted them green. This one is beige and actually has a steel fuel tank.
I can't find anything on it that says Lawn Boy but I can tell it is. Same magnesium deck and engine as one of the other ones I bought last night. The beige one has a round name plate on it that I can't read but it does have a number stamped on the name plate "7215". The nameplate also seems to have a big "M" in the middle of it and the letters "oard" can be made out on the circumference of the nameplate. The plastic engine cowling has "Fingertip Starting" written on it.
The other similar machine has serial no. 903189B and the number 5124 stamped on the left side of the nameplate. The nameplate say the mower is made by Outboard Marine Corporation.
The third mower has a more modern engine and a steel deck. It' serial number is 9385904 and model no. 7050.
Mechanical status:
The old beige 7215 fired up and ran with nothing more than a carb and spark plug cleaning. Compression was showing at 60 psi which seems low.
In order to get the other similar LB running, I had to take the reed plate and carburetor off of the beige one.
It still wouldn't run because it had no spark. I pulled the flywheel, sanded some rust off of the magnets and coil, re-gapped the coil, cleaned and set the points, cleaned and set the spark plug. I poured fuel into the spark plug hole, put the plug in and it fired up after a few pulls. The carb from the beige machine has a plunger built into it for priming rather than a primer bulb. Compression was showing 60 psi on this one too. Strange. I poured some engine oil into the cylinder to seal the rings and compression didn't change much. I'm thinking my compression tester might be screwed. I'll be looking further into that.
Regardless of the low compression reading, it started and ran very well. I let it run for a good ten minutes and it was very steady.
Can't tell you much about the third machine. Engine looks good. Carb is covered in greasy dirt and looks like it might be plastic. Can't test compression because the pull start mechanism is broken off. The shaft that holds the recoil system onto the block broke off at the block. I've got both pieces and will see if I can get them welded together.
So, I've got two machines that run but share a carb. The guy I bought them from says he'll see if he can find the carb for it. In the meantime, I'll start working on no. 3 when I get the recoil fixed in the next day or two.
Anyone out there familiar with these models?
One of them is so old it's before they painted them green. This one is beige and actually has a steel fuel tank.
I can't find anything on it that says Lawn Boy but I can tell it is. Same magnesium deck and engine as one of the other ones I bought last night. The beige one has a round name plate on it that I can't read but it does have a number stamped on the name plate "7215". The nameplate also seems to have a big "M" in the middle of it and the letters "oard" can be made out on the circumference of the nameplate. The plastic engine cowling has "Fingertip Starting" written on it.
The other similar machine has serial no. 903189B and the number 5124 stamped on the left side of the nameplate. The nameplate say the mower is made by Outboard Marine Corporation.
The third mower has a more modern engine and a steel deck. It' serial number is 9385904 and model no. 7050.
Mechanical status:
The old beige 7215 fired up and ran with nothing more than a carb and spark plug cleaning. Compression was showing at 60 psi which seems low.
In order to get the other similar LB running, I had to take the reed plate and carburetor off of the beige one.
It still wouldn't run because it had no spark. I pulled the flywheel, sanded some rust off of the magnets and coil, re-gapped the coil, cleaned and set the points, cleaned and set the spark plug. I poured fuel into the spark plug hole, put the plug in and it fired up after a few pulls. The carb from the beige machine has a plunger built into it for priming rather than a primer bulb. Compression was showing 60 psi on this one too. Strange. I poured some engine oil into the cylinder to seal the rings and compression didn't change much. I'm thinking my compression tester might be screwed. I'll be looking further into that.
Regardless of the low compression reading, it started and ran very well. I let it run for a good ten minutes and it was very steady.
Can't tell you much about the third machine. Engine looks good. Carb is covered in greasy dirt and looks like it might be plastic. Can't test compression because the pull start mechanism is broken off. The shaft that holds the recoil system onto the block broke off at the block. I've got both pieces and will see if I can get them welded together.
So, I've got two machines that run but share a carb. The guy I bought them from says he'll see if he can find the carb for it. In the meantime, I'll start working on no. 3 when I get the recoil fixed in the next day or two.
Anyone out there familiar with these models?