I love my riding lawn mower. But it seems to develop a new problem every Spring. This year the choke knob broke off in my hand.
I'm one of those people who NEVER have normal problems.
My "Top 30" plant provider sent me the wrong plant 5 years ago and it turned out to be "wickedly invasive".
My twice-spayed cat STILL goes into heat.
Any repair problem is "Wow, I've never seen THAT happen before.
My "Murphy's Law" event is what "Can't happen", does.
So, naturally, the choke knob problem was "that doesn't happen". Well, it did. I pulled the choke out as usual a few days ago and the shaft snapped right off. I could feel it. And it just came out loose when pulled. You can't start an mower that needs the choke adjusted when you can't adjust it... I felt around inside the engine compartment to see how it was attached, but couldn't see a clue to how to get at it. It turns out later that the entire gas tank has to be removed. "Not something I want to mess with".
So I called a guy who will come and fix mowers on site. I've used him before. He does good work and is honest and his deal is "fix on site". But to be honest, he usually has to take the mower away. But at least he will do that. He did something neat that I will have to remember. He bypassed the choke by spraying carburater cleaner down the removed air filter! That primed the starter! Hey, I didn't know. Maybe you did. LOL! I'm a gardener and woodworker. When it comes to engines, I'm lost. I have 2 gas chainsaws in the basement and I can't make them stay running. That's why I have an electric one. It always works!
So he started it right up (Starting the mower was not the problem when the choke lever worked) and drove it onto his truck. If I had known that trick before he came, I would have mowed the lawn first. It is already 4" high and growing. When I get the mower back in a week, it will be 6-8" high. This time of year, you CAN actually watch the grass grow!
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