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Fuels and Lubricants for Small Engines Jim Wills Biosystems Engineering and Environmental Science Department Extension University of Tennessee Two Main Types of Small Engines on Lawn and Garden Equipment Four-Stroke Cycle Two-Stroke Cycle Cooling System
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Fuels and Lubricants for Small Engines UT Extension
Jim Wills • Biosystems Engineering and Environmental Science Department • Extension • University of Tennessee UT Extension
Two Main Types of Small Engines on Lawn and Garden Equipment • Four-Stroke Cycle • Two-Stroke Cycle UT Extension
Cooling System • Most engines on lawn and garden equipment are air cooled • Fan on flywheel circulates air over engine for cooling while engine is running • Water cooled engines have radiator and liquid coolant circulating in water jacket around engine UT Extension
Flywheel/Fan UT Extension
Four-Stroke Engines • Four strokes* of the engine for one power cycle • Stroke 1 – Intake • Stroke 2 – Compression • Stroke 3 – Power • Stroke 4 – Exhaust * A stroke is one up or down movement of the piston in the cylinder UT Extension
Four-Stroke Operation UT Extension
Typical Four Stroke Lawn and Garden Equipment • Push-Type Lawn Mowers • Lawn Tractors • Garden Tractors • Pressure Washers • Chippers/Shreaders • Garden Tillers UT Extension
Two Stroke Operation UT Extension
Typical Two-Stroke Equipment • Chainsaws • Weed Trimmers • Leaf Blowers • Hedge Clippers • Air Compressors • Small Garden Tillers • Some push type lawnmowers UT Extension
Four-Stroke Engine Characteristics • Separate fuel tank and oil reservoir • Heavier/larger than same HP two-cycle • Cannot be tilted much to side • Longer engine life • Larger HP uses UT Extension
Two-Stroke Engine Characteristics • Fuel and oil are mixed in fuel tank • No separate reservoir for oil* • Can be operated on side and upside down • Lighter/smaller for given HP • Shorter overall engine life • Usually more noise and smoke * Some boat motors and motorcycles havea reservoir UT Extension
Main Causes of PrematureSmall Engine Failure(Short Engine Life) UT Extension
Dirt! • 60% to 70% of all failures are caused by dirt* getting into engine *Dust, insects, bits of grass, etc. UT Extension
Service air filter on a regular basis (usually once a season) • Service more often under dusty or adverse conditions UT Extension
For every gallon of gasoline used, the air filter must clean 10,000 to 11,000 gallons of air UT Extension
Air Filter – Paper Type UT Extension
Carburetor UT Extension
Failure to use proper oil* * Viscosity (thick or thin) * API Classification (SJ, SL, Etc.) UT Extension
Failure to change oil on a regular schedule • Mileage • Hours of use • Time of use (weeks, months, etc.) UT Extension
Failure to maintain proper oil level in crankcase • Check dip stick • Check oil level plug UT Extension
Checking Oil Level UT Extension
Failure to use clean, fresh fuel • Dirty fuel tank • Dirty fuel can • Dirty funnel • Trash/dirt around fuel cap UT Extension
Install a fuel filter on fuel line if not factory equipped UT Extension
Fuel Filter UT Extension
Use a suitable fuel container to prevent fuel contamination and insure safety • Metal cans will eventually rust inside • Plastic containers will not rust • Use a funnel with mesh filter UT Extension
Can Good Plastic Fuel UT Extension
Failure to use proper fuel • Unleaded fuel is cleaner burning • Choose proper fuel octane level • Do not use fuel containing alcohol • Use lead substitutes if 1974 or older UT Extension
Operating tips to extend engine life • Let engine idle for two minutes before stopping • Never stop under load • Avoid stalls and sudden impacts UT Extension
Avoid Impacts UT Extension
Flywheel Keyway UT Extension
SAFETY!!! • Use approved fuel containers • Never fuel a hot engine • Stop engine before making repairs or adjustments UT Extension
Motor Oils UT Extension
Castrol Brand Oil UT Extension
Functions of Motor Oil • Lubricate moving parts • Seal around gaskets, seals, piston rings • Clean contaminates from engine parts • Remove excess heat from engine UT Extension
Oil container has information on oil quality and viscosity UT Extension
API (American Petroleum Institute) circle contains API Service Classification and Viscosity UT Extension
API Circle UT Extension
VISCOSITY • Is the oil thick or thin? • Affected by temperature • Affected by shear of oil molecules in lubrication process • All oils are tested at same temperatures to establish viscosity rating UT Extension
Viscosity Values • SAE 0W, 5W, 10W, 15W, 20W • SAE 30, 40, 50 • SAE 10W-30, 5W-30, 15W-50, 10W-40, etc. • “W” means suitable for wintertime use (cold temperatures) • “SAE”- Society of Automotive Engineers UT Extension
API Service Classifications • “S” - for gasoline engines (S- Spark ignition) • “C” - for diesel engines (C- Compression ignition) UT Extension
Gasoline Classes • SA, SB, SC, SD, SE, SF, SG, SH, SJ, SL • SA is lowest quality • SL is highest quality UT Extension
Diesel Classes • CA, CB, CC, CD, CE, CF, CG, CH • CA is lowest quality • CH is highest quality UT Extension
Petroleum Based Oils • Base stock of about 85% oil by volume • Additives of about 15% by volume • Additives include detergent, anti-oxidation, anti-corrosion, extreme heat, extreme pressure, anti-rust, etc. UT Extension
Value of Oil Additives? • Slick 50, T-Plus, STP, Motor Honey, etc. • Usually not worth the price !!! UT Extension
T-Plus Additive UT Extension
Why Change Motor Oil? • Replace additives • Remove contaminants ( water, acid, carbon, etc. UT Extension
When to Change Motor Oil? • At recommended mileage (3,000 on cars, trucks, campers, etc.) • At 50 hours on small engines • More often under severe conditions (pulling heavy loads, steep climbing, etc.) • Change when oil is hot, not cold UT Extension
Changing Brands of Oil • You do not have to use the same brand of oil forever in a given engine • To change brands, drain old brand and replace with new brand – change oil filter at same time • Use same viscosity UT Extension
Oil for Your Small Engines • SAE 30* • SAE 10W-30 • Synthetic oil * Above 40 degrees F UT Extension