There is a good chance that the carburator needs cleaning. It should be removed, taken apart and soaked in parts cleaner. You can get a rebuild kit at any small engine repair shop. It will have new gaskets, float valve and main jet. You should also drain the gas tank, make sure it is clean, and put new gas in it.
2007-05-02 05:50:25
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answer #1
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answered by renpen 7
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If you left gasoline in the tank/carburetor over an extended period to time you probably have bad gas. Today's gasoline is loaded up with additives which make it such that gasoline doesn't store well.
Try removing the old gas and use fresh gas. For your new gas be sure to add a fuel stabilizer to it. You can get fuel stabilizer at any auto parts store, Walmart...
2007-05-02 05:45:09
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answer #2
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answered by Fester Frump 7
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reckoning on the variety and age of the engine it would want to have a compression launch, it really is put in for ease of starting up. flow reference the spark plug to an NGK. verify the old plug and or the carburetor glide bowl does no longer have any undemanding to make sure status water-droplets meaning you've water on your gas furnish! If I had the variety and serial decision off the shroud it will be undemanding to verify if it had factors or digital ignition.
2016-11-24 20:48:52
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Take out the spark plug, check the gap, and clean the tip with sand paper to bright metal,
blow off the grit, reinstall, and it very well may start. Make sure air filter is not clogged. Make sure that it can turn freely, check the oil, is there enough, or is it burnt.
2007-05-02 05:41:24
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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dirty air filter, fuel filter plugged , water in fuel , needle valve stopped up
2007-05-02 05:42:45
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Buy American
2007-05-02 05:38:18
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answer #6
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answered by rands67217 1
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