Hey Jim
~400 hours on the Honda 100cc â2000â now.
167 hours on the larger Yamaha 171cc â2800â.
I only bought one RPM/Tachometer, and have swapped it to the Yamaha semi-permanently now.
Life on air cooled outdoor four-strokes.
I have a Scotts/JD rider mower with a Kohler Command single 17.5 hp still runs fine, full power; no smoke, no oil consumption that the hour meter quit on at 1600 hours. We used for another 2 years at ~200 hours a year. So has to be at last 2000 hours. Mower use up untill the front wheel falling of due to worn axles; and the mower decks will not take one more repair.
I have an exact same model mower that I (wife volunteered me as âyardmanâ) used for a quadriplegic fellow for three years. THEN I could do the oil six years never changed enough, oil changes, catching never upâs. He insisted that I use up his 3 cases of quarts 10W-40 Pennzoil standard oil only.
415 hours and it is down on power. Smokes on cold staring upâs. Consumes oil between the (now mine) 100 hour oil changes.
I bought this machine as a spare parts machine for $300. USD at his after passing estate/yard sale.
Variable speed and loads breaking-in on non-synthetic âmineralâ oil makes a big long-life starting out difference.
5 hour first oil change gets manufacturing and breaking-in hard particles OUT before premature wear and damage makes a big life-long difference too.
Fully broken-in then switching to the best 0W-40, 5W-50 synthetic oils makes a big difference in year-around use for long-life too. Some say seasonal changes of straight weights 20 and 30 are better without the modifiers in them. Maybe on watercooled. Air cooled temp range daily too much in my opinion.
Being willing to dump out this expensive oil at no longer than 100 hours; or combustion gasesâparticles/acids coloring contamination intervals makes a big long-life difference too.
This Honda; This Yamaha; it is only a once a week at fuel ran out; tool-less; lift whole unit; pouring out the old oil. Dump-in a large mounthed marked quart bottle filled to 400 ml for the Honda, 600 ml for the Yamaha of pre-transferred out of a Wal-mart/ Bi-Mart 5 quart jug of synthetic.
Only âtoolâ is a little funnel and a cotton rag.
3-5 minutes, tops.
Another operator controlled circumstance for long life is warming up under no loading until at least piston/rings/cylinder walls warming to stable dimensions. WILL vary with outside temps hugely.
These generators getting this. I only apply the electrical loading until after the crank-case/metal oil necks feel warm-to-touch.
Rider lawn mowers gets this. Walk behind mowers gets this.
10 hours a year 7.5 B&S engined rototiller does not get this warming up. Pull-to-start-then-GO.
~100 hours a year 30 ton hydraulic log splitter with a 10.5 hp B&S, gets a lot of winter use in the woodshed of only 20 minutes (one wheel barrow and kindling box full) of pull-to-start-then-GO running too.
These both now starting up blue-puff smoke. 12 years, maybe only 150 hours on the tiller. 5 years, maybe only 500 hours on the woodsplitter.
Same breaking-in and synthetic oils used on these. Bad B&Sâs? Not really. These both the Intek I/C engines with cast iron bores. These both ran always 3600 RPM all-out for the use-needs-demands.
These other engines loaded running at a lower 2400 to 3300 RPM.
I am shooting for 8000 hours engine life on the Honda and Yamaha generators.
At most 16 hours a day for a year = 5840 annually.
Actually only doing 12 hours at most a day now = 4380 hours annually.
The Honda unit can use many engine parts off of the two same family Honda enegined walk behind mowers we have. 100 cc Honda horizontal shaft engines on e-bay/Amazon all of the time. Craigs list too. $100 well used to ~$399 new outright.
Yamaha 171cc engines $299 new; and the larger same block sized 200cc version $399 new at three different mail-order sources.
These would all give the new crankshaft, connecting rod, piston and rings, new cylinder head with new valves for an âin-frame rebuildâ.
For me the key was to always have TWO alternative possibilities workable on hand all of the time.
IF I was PV solar dependent: Iâd want two of everything critical to be able to have at least half capability, come what may.
This is what too many miss on WayneKâs personal vehicle woodgas systems:
double and triple by-pass capabilities for at least some woodgas power.
And all backed up by still gasoline capable.
Single point failures YOU BUILT-IN will sooner versus later, suck big time!
Have three ways to open a can of stew, needs must!
She may be gone on you visiting a sister or her mother just to wake you up to realities.
REgards
Steve Unruh