Jay4200
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2005
- Messages
- 2,053
- Location
- Hudson/Weare, NH
- Tractor
- L4200GST w/ LA680 & BX2200D w/ LA211
All this said I have a friend who insists on running them dry and all but last year I usually mow his yard for the first cutting because he is screwing with carb problems in the spring. Last year he bought a new mower and I have his old one just for giggles I am gonna see if it starts in the spring. Sneek over and mow his yard LOL
Running dry doesn't get the fuel out of the carb bowl - it only gets about 1/3 out, at least on a multi-circuit carb (like in a dirtbike). The pilot resides at the top of the bowl, with the main at the bottom. Running the motor with the gas off until it stalls generally only pulls down the fuel to the pilot level. Then, the remaining fuel goes bad and/or evaporates, leaving deposits that do things like stick the float to the bottom of the bowl.
Most snowblowers have a drain button on the bottom of the bowl so you just have to turn off the gas and push the button and *BLOOP* the bowl is empty. Brilliant. I don't know why EVERY small engine carb isn't set up that way.
JayC