MMO worked for a Mower Carb

Status
Not open for further replies.
Joined
Feb 9, 2009
Messages
211
Location
USA
Just a personal experience. I was at the gas station down the street last summer and my neighbor was there filling a few gas cans. I noticed that he was putting 93 octane in the cans. I asked him what it was for and he told me that it was for his B&S powered lawn mower.

99.9% of all Briggs engines are designed for regular fuel because they are often exported to other countries that don't have all the grades that we have.

He said his mower ran horribly on regular and premium seemed to fix the problem. And that not even a new plug helped. I pulled the plug on it when we got back and the frosty whiteness confirmed that it was running lean (not enough fuel).

I didn't want to rebuild a carb, and he didn't want to buy any parts so I stumbled into my garage (I went to the gas station for beer). I use MMO to soak engine parts of stuff I'm working on and so I have several gallons of it at any one time.

I put maybe an ounce in the mower tank and filled it with his premium fuel. Then I told him to tie the handle and let it run through the tank of gas. While that was going on, he went to Sears and grabbed a new plug.

New plug installed, and I removed the muffler. I rotated the blade by hand until the exhaust valve was closed. I tilted the mower 45 degrees on its side so that I could pour MMO in the exhaust port and let the exhaust valve "soak" while the engine was still warm. After an hour or so with the muffler still off, I refueled and added a little more MMO than the first time. Black stuff blew all over the concrete and there was a big cloud of minty smoke. When stuff stopped flying out, I reinstalled the muffler and he ran through the entire tank of gas with MMO.

Next day, I took some regular fuel from one of my gas can with no MMO and it started on the first pull with no knock or ping. The neighbor was happy and gave me a six pack of Blue Moon for my troubles. He saw me buy some at the gas station. It was a good thing too! I was almost out!

10.gif
Cheers
 
Yes I am just starting to get on a MMO kick myself.

Did one Auto-RX run I had to abort on my Dad's van. Did 2 more all the way throgh. I had the oil pan off because the timing cover was leaking from pits in it.

I then noticed there was still some sludge in the engine. I am running a 1/2 qt of MMO in the oil and some in the gas. I might run another short run with MMO.
I might start running it in my fuel at times.
 
I'm personally not a fan of using it in crank case oil, but it works well to get stuff off of pistons, bearings, cams, ect... once I've taken an engine apart and soak it. My reasoning is that I don't want to use an actual degreaser or emulsification agent and then have that get in the engine. I would rather use something that is allegedly safe to have in the engine to begin with.

After a long soak, most of the discoloration and grime comes off with a toothbrush and light pressure. Last I checked, there aren't any toothbrushes in engines. The grime DOES NOT come off unless I rub it.

That said, I don't think it does a ton as crank case fill. But to each their own.
 
I have never put anything in my crankcase except for valvoline oil treatment, my valve body that is visible from the fill cap looks as clean as a new car.
regular maint should work wonders too :-)
 
Originally Posted By: cronk
If you an see your valve body from your crank case filler, there is something seriously wrong with your car! LMAO!


LOL.gif
 
Originally Posted By: SnakeOil
Just a personal experience. I was at the gas station down the street last summer and my neighbor was there filling a few gas cans. I noticed that he was putting 93 octane in the cans. I asked him what it was for and he told me that it was for his B&S powered lawn mower.

99.9% of all Briggs engines are designed for regular fuel because they are often exported to other countries that don't have all the grades that we have.

He said his mower ran horribly on regular and premium seemed to fix the problem. And that not even a new plug helped. I pulled the plug on it when we got back and the frosty whiteness confirmed that it was running lean (not enough fuel).

I didn't want to rebuild a carb, and he didn't want to buy any parts so I stumbled into my garage (I went to the gas station for beer). I use MMO to soak engine parts of stuff I'm working on and so I have several gallons of it at any one time.

I put maybe an ounce in the mower tank and filled it with his premium fuel. Then I told him to tie the handle and let it run through the tank of gas. While that was going on, he went to Sears and grabbed a new plug.

New plug installed, and I removed the muffler. I rotated the blade by hand until the exhaust valve was closed. I tilted the mower 45 degrees on its side so that I could pour MMO in the exhaust port and let the exhaust valve "soak" while the engine was still warm. After an hour or so with the muffler still off, I refueled and added a little more MMO than the first time. Black stuff blew all over the concrete and there was a big cloud of minty smoke. When stuff stopped flying out, I reinstalled the muffler and he ran through the entire tank of gas with MMO.

Next day, I took some regular fuel from one of my gas can with no MMO and it started on the first pull with no knock or ping. The neighbor was happy and gave me a six pack of Blue Moon for my troubles. He saw me buy some at the gas station. It was a good thing too! I was almost out!

10.gif
Cheers


MMO has its uses. Glad it worked.

I am a major fan of Blue Moon aswell! If you like to put orange in it, try Shock Top. Its a Wheat Ale with a hint of orange and lemon zest.
 
I like the shock top as well, it's just hard to find at small stores around here.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom