Bought one then, checked it out then, (obviouslyly did not need it for the intended purpose) stored and moved it a few times over the next 17 years until Sunday after Matthew hit here in NE SC. Had nothing else to do since no major damage and we had not had power for 18 hours or so. 16 cu ft Freezer full of meat, 16 cu ft fridge full of beer (!), 25 cu ft side by side, slowly warming up. Dug generator out of the back of the garage, checked to make sure the spark plug was clean, pulled the rope a few times without the plug to get that 17 year old oil slinging, reinstalled the plug. Sprayed a little starting fluid in it to confirm it had spark. Opened the shut off valve on the empty tank, and added a little 93 100%, choked it, and it fired right up. Shut it down quickly, drained oil, and put some old GTX 10w30 in it. Ran it some Sunday AM and then in the evening. Power came back on Sunday night, shut it back down.
As a BITOGer, I bought 2 exact replacement spark plugs for the single cylinder (B&S 10 hp) Will change the oil to Mobil 1 Extended Performance 5w30 or RP 5w30, as I have a quart of each on hand. Will empty the fuel, run the carb dry, ...thinking of fogging it with Stabil Fogging Oil.
BTW, Freezer is normally -22 degrees F, and after 18 hours with no power, had warmed to -5 degrees F. Good for long storage, didnt lose anything. For those interested, the beer stayed plenty cool enough to drink. Some here are still without power, due to huge oak trees and lots of water, with a little wind to tip them over (they dont break).
As a BITOGer, I bought 2 exact replacement spark plugs for the single cylinder (B&S 10 hp) Will change the oil to Mobil 1 Extended Performance 5w30 or RP 5w30, as I have a quart of each on hand. Will empty the fuel, run the carb dry, ...thinking of fogging it with Stabil Fogging Oil.
BTW, Freezer is normally -22 degrees F, and after 18 hours with no power, had warmed to -5 degrees F. Good for long storage, didnt lose anything. For those interested, the beer stayed plenty cool enough to drink. Some here are still without power, due to huge oak trees and lots of water, with a little wind to tip them over (they dont break).