How To Prepare Your Lawn Mower For Spring

If your lawn mower has sat all winter long, there are some items that will need to be accomplished to ensure that it is ready for a year of mowing.

The first item should be a thorough tune-up. The oil will need to be changed, so start the mower and warm it up for about 5 minutes. Now change the oil and use what the manufacturer recommends.

The next times would be the air filter and spark plug. After you change them, blow off the dirt and dust off the engine and deck using compressed air. Lubricate the control cables with a dry film lubricant such as dry silicone.

Remove the spark plug cable and then remove the lawn mower blade and scrape the deck. Sharpen and balance the blade and install it and torque it to the manufacturers specifications.

Check the drive wheels and lubricate them with dry silicone as well. Remove the nut or bolt that holds the wheel on and lubricate both the axle and the drive gears.

Re-install the spark plug cable and  fill the mower with fresh gas and then test it to ensure that all of the functions are working properly. If everything works like normal, you are ready to mow your lawn!

If you need a professional in your area to ensure your lawn mower is ready for spring, visit our Locations page for help.

 

My Lawn Mower Won’t Start

This is one of the most frequent problems with a lawn mower and especially if it has sat over the winter. Depending on where it stayed over the winter could add to the problem. If it was in an unheated shed for example, the battery could have run down or mice may have chewed your ignition wiring.

In many cases it is the fuel itself that has gone bad. Over time fuel becomes stale and the lighter part of the fuel will evaporate which makes it very hard to ignite. The fuel will then begin to phase separate into different parts and dry up which plugs up the ports in the carburetor. This will cause your lawn mower to not start. The only correct way to resolve this issue is to clean the carburetor and properly dispose of the fuel in the gas tank.

Your ignition system could also be the problem for your lawn mower not starting. Your ignition coil could be bad or the spark plug as well. The kill system could also be malfunctioning causing a no spark condition. A key switch or safety switch could also be the culprit and by testing them out with an ohmmeter, they can be ruled out if they are in working order.

Those are the main things that cause a lawn mower to not start when it should. By inspecting and diagnosing them one at a time, you can rule out which items are good and which are not.

 

5 Things That Will Make Your Lawn Mower Last Longer

Today’s lawn mowers are expensive machines and you don’t want to have to retire one before it is time. The other side of that coin is that it puts another lawn mower in a landfill somewhere along with thousands of others and adds to our growing trash problem.

It is far better and more economical to keep your lawn mower in great condition and with these simple tips, yours will last for years longer than it should.

  1. Change Your Oil When The Engine Manufacturer Says To

The first engine oil change is the most critical and most manufacturers say to do it after 5 hours of operation. If you mow for an hour, then after the fifth time you mow. After that it is normally done at 25 hours for push and self-propelled mowers and 50-100 hours for larger mowers with an oil filter such as a riding lawn mower.

Use the proper grade of oil when the engine is brand new and then if you want to switch to synthetic oil after the first oil change, you are fine to do so.

  1. Change Your Air, Fuel, Hydrostatic Transmission and Oil Filters

These filters do a very good job of keeping contaminants out of the air, fuel and oil. They must be changed periodically to ensure that those contaminants do not get inside your engine and cause damage.

Dirt can enter the intake through a clogged air filter or one that has holes in it or is improperly installed. Fuel filters can become clogged with debris that is in the gas tank such as rust on older machines and plastic or rubber particles from newer fuel tanks. Oil filters can become clogged with metal shavings and sludge that normally occurs in an engine.

Change them out on a schedule and be sure to check the air filter often and if it needs to be replaced, change it.

  1. Grease the Chassis

The chassis includes the steering arms, wheels, suspension components, deck lift arms and deck pulleys. If there is a grease fitting on the mower, it is meant to be greased. Some components such as wheels need to be removed to grease the axles. Clean up any grease that squeezed out of components to keep it from attracting dirt and grass clippings.

  1. Keep the Lawn Mower Clean

When dirt gets on the engine, it is like an insulating blanket. It keeps the heat in and makes the engine run hotter. The same thing for the hydrostatic transmission if your lawn mower has one. Use compressed air to clean out the engine cooling fins and blower shroud. Also be sure that the sides of the block are kept clean. Blow the grass off of the hydrostatic transmission as well.

After each mowing, blow the grass off of the deck with a leaf blower or other suitable method. Grass accumulating in this area will cause the deck to rust and the parts that move on the deck such as the idler pulleys to stick. Put some dry lubricant on those linkages that move to keep them working correctly. A dry spray silicone works good.

Scrape the bottom of the deck to keep the wet grass off of it as well. This is where the rust really gets started and before long can penetrate the deck.

  1. Tune-up The Lawn Mower Every Year

Many people skip this step. They think that if it is running alright, they will not need one. This is when those critical filters are normally changed as well as the spark plugs. The blades are sharpened and the overall machine is inspected. You want to look for cracked or worn out deck and drive belts, loose steering components, missing nuts and bolts, items that do not work, the battery charging system is working and if it has cooling hoses, check those for cracks and the condition of the coolant. Also check to see if the deck is level and that the pulleys are not binding or wearing out in the case of plastic drive pulleys.

With those easy to check things, you can keep your lawn mower running strong for longer and have much less downtime for years to come.