I've always noticed that the guys on KZbin like you're self only have half a million subscribers but yet you're videos are always the best always to the point never clickbait and never beg for subs and advertise super expensive merch, people like you still give KZbin hope thank you for your service ❤️
@Alan-tt5tp2 жыл бұрын
Yeah you are right, you definitly sound like a yt OG ^^ Mustie is one of favorites youtubers for the same reason
@bontronblock2 жыл бұрын
well said. mustie is pretty dope.
@Hjerte_Verke2 жыл бұрын
No annoying intro with music, no boring intro "hi this is me" talking head mode, but instead immediately shows us the machine and the issue. That is so refreshing
@plane-o-12922 жыл бұрын
I agree with you 100%! It is unfortunate that the world is filled with entirely too many people that thrive on and/or are addicted to sensationism.
@hkfan45962 жыл бұрын
Him and Andrew camarata are my favorites. They should each have 5M subscribers.
@Gutntagged2 жыл бұрын
after so many of your awesome cool video's , im sure you can fix my mother-n-law, she wont start doing anything, and she sits around leaking gas, and taking up space in the garage, cool video thx for uploading
@ludvigericson69302 жыл бұрын
Sounds like she’s run out of lubricant. Your regular spill and fill job, I reckon. Might want to look out for a possible plugged exhaust also
@adamdnewman2 жыл бұрын
LOL
@Mark_C12 жыл бұрын
Even though these older models are pre computerisation, they can still suffer from a simple ID10T error
@punkinpie46322 жыл бұрын
I just wanted to finally thank you for what you do with your videos I am a veteran who is now disabled, so most days I am confined to my chair and a lot of TV. I am a former mechanic of sorts, and I still have learned so much from you. Love your videos, keep them coming!.
@ManxAndy2 жыл бұрын
Ahh….Sunday wouldn’t be the same, morning Mustie….👍🇮🇲
@waynewolfe88177 ай бұрын
Water and oil do mix. I was our plant's oiler. We had 4 presses with approximately 3 thousand gallon hydraulic reservoirs. When I took over in 07, the oil looked like dirty milk. I talked the management into buying a purifier/dehydrator. With a small 10 gal/min unit, it took 6 weeks to clear the oil. I caught over 200 gallons of water that was condensing in the exhaust port. Before I got the purifier, we were going through 1 or 2 high pressure pumps every week. They cost $5k each, the rebuild kit was $3800. After purifing we went a year and four months before we lost a pump, and it was probably half worn out to begin with. Water and dust coursing through the pumps had worn the orficies and internal turns at least twice the size that they began life. Later we got a 50 gal/min purifier, and an 80 gal/min filter cart. New virgin oil came in in 275 gal totes, and were filtered to 50 microns, (you can see a 65 micron particle with your bare eye), so I filtered to 3 micron, and that oil would sparkle. We went almost 10 years before loosing a pump. They operate at 3000 psi.
@sd91062 жыл бұрын
As always - thank you for your time and effort. I am not an engine guy, and have no clue. Because of your videos, I am getting a better understanding of how things work.
@Hjerte_Verke2 жыл бұрын
Very easy to get into small engines, give it a go. Most of the broken stuff at the curb just won't start and/or has bad gas in it, as you will find is the case with 99% of the stuff Mustie hauls home (in other words, they have spark and compression but the carburetor is clogged). And with plenty of "fix it" videos on YT, you can basically watch and become an expert on one particular engine. The rest of your time is looking up parts numbers and shopping.
@sd91062 жыл бұрын
@@Hjerte_Verke Thank you for the great advice... I'll have to start looking to get my hands a little bit dirtier... LOL - have a great night.
@vhfgamer2 жыл бұрын
I love these autopsy videos. Those are the videos where heads come off, and engines get completely pulled apart (as opposed to ordinary carb cleaning). And it's always neat seeing how these things grenade themselves.
@DougsMessyGarage2 жыл бұрын
Part of me was surprised Mustie didn't dig into the hoard and com up with a connecting rod and make this thing at least fire over. I know, not worth the effort but I have seen him work some absolute magic in the past.
@Philc2312 жыл бұрын
I was hoping he would . This thing could be saved . But as a parts unit ,it’s perfect.
@davekauffman87272 жыл бұрын
Or another engine entirely, he has one a little like it I'm sure, and he's going to cuss himself when he comes across it in his hoard after the rest of the machine has gone to the junk yard. I love Mustie, he's a great guy, I've watched his videos since 2008 or so, he knows what he's doing, and he has all the tools a guy could want.
@scottnyc65722 жыл бұрын
I was really hoping for that scenario as well.Then i saw that Jeep thinking it was his at first..all these teasers.
@staind2882 жыл бұрын
My thoughts exactly. I was certain he was going to resurrect it
@MrCarGuy2 жыл бұрын
Sure, but these things are junk even when new
@731trident2 жыл бұрын
Everytime I watch your videos, it's like I'm hanging out in the shop with an old pal, Thanks!
@ndafarachaitezvi11392 жыл бұрын
Always great seeing your video on the notification.Thanks for sharing and taking us along
@TractorWrangler012 жыл бұрын
That engine was run without oil in it. The rod over heated from friction and it welded itself to the rod as the engine was running. The flywheel weight kept the crank spinning and it bent the aluminum rod untill it broke, and the crank hammerd what was left of the rod until pieces were everywhere. If you take a look at the crank journal you will see that it's covered in aluminum. Believe it or not that is probably repairable. The aluminum has a lower melting temp. than the steel crank so you may be able to manually remove the aluminum from it. The bearing surface may still be ok. If that's the case a new rod and a careful component inspection and it should be servicable once the valve issue is addressed. The valve is stuck because it was submerged in water. It's most likely not bent because it got rusted stuck after the crank shaft broke while sitting in the basement or where ever it was. I would soak it in Liguid Wrench for a day or so then try tapping the valve out of the valve guide carefully. If you meet resistance shoot some more penetrating oil in there and try it again the next day. When you do get some movement spin the valve some and it will begin to free up. Once you get the valve out put it in the lathe and clean up the rust and put a mic on it to see if it's bent. If it's not, clean up the valve guide with a brass rifle bore cleaning brush and a drill with more Liquid Wrench. Now clean the seat and drop the valve back in.. Check the piston for damage, free up the rings and clean the ring grooves, get a new rod and wrist pin and reassemble. Give it a try. I have done this at least 10 times. It should make a good video too.
@EZ4U2Say112 жыл бұрын
It’s not worth it. parts horde
@TractorWrangler012 жыл бұрын
@@EZ4U2Say11 It would be worth it to someone who had the same problem but only 50 bucks to fix it. It would be worth it if it got a million views too.
@fromagefrizzbizz93772 жыл бұрын
A trick for taking aluminum off of crank bearings: hydrochloric acid (aka muriatic). You can get this stuff from hardware stores - used to etch concrete, and for some REALLY stubborn hard water deposits in toilets, rust stains etc. CLR (and similar products such as Zep acid toilet cleaner) are effectively the same, but not nearly as strong. Put the crank shaft horizontally above a plastic pan in a well ventilated area. Cut strips of paper towel the width of the journal surface. Now put on rubber gloves, safety eyewear (and double check your ventilation). Dip a strip or two in the acid, and carefully evenly wrap the soaking strips around the journal. Wait about 10 minutes, remove the paper towel and dispose safely, and wash/clean the journal. You'll notice that the aluminum is disappearing. Repeat as necessary to get most of the aluminum off. Since you're doing it quickly, the HCl doesn't have time to damage the hardened steel of the crank. Finish off with some fine emory strips which will remove the last aluminum and polish the journal. This will *usually* not make the journal too small - mike it if you have the correct info. In some cases you can get piston rods in slightly different sizes (much the same as oversize pistons). Good as new. James Condon has showed this technique many times in his videos (usually those involving blowed-up generator motors).
@TractorWrangler012 жыл бұрын
@@fromagefrizzbizz9377 I've never tried that method however it sounds to me Iike it has merit. Most of the time honestly though the bulk flakes right off with just a pick or carefully with a screwdriver. I will try this next time to see which is easier or faster. Thanks for the tip.
@fromagefrizzbizz93772 жыл бұрын
@@TractorWrangler01 It depends on how bad the deposition of aluminum is. The HCl trick is the best way to preserve the original journal surface as best as possible, without risk of scratching it. When done optimally, the aluminum is gone, especially the smaller hard-to-pick bits and just needs a bit of polishing. Let us know how you did. I do recommend watching one of James Condon's videos showing how it's done.
@benjaminsmith99432 жыл бұрын
Somehow, I'm willing to invest 30 minutes of my life finding out how a worthless piece of junk across the country became worthless. Sir, you are a showman!
@ehsnils2 жыл бұрын
Well, as I see it there's a lot of free parts from this machine. Not everything is broken.
@tarstarkusz2 жыл бұрын
Given the condition of the machine, he should have bought a new connecting rod. All that damage to the crank journal is superficial and it's not in the crank, it's aluminum from the rod. It would clean right up. The crank journals are hardened. All that surface problem is not in the crank journal.
@Hjerte_Verke2 жыл бұрын
@@facel2 I doubt those parts are "more than the thing is worth", new ones (518 ZE Snow Blower) are listed at $589.00, so a repaired one he might sell at half price and at the least, it's good to give machines a second life and keep them out of the landfill. It has a 99cc engine too so he could either buy new parts or used off ebay. I'm surprised it costs that much new because it sure looks like a small budget model.
@tarstarkusz2 жыл бұрын
@@facel2 The only part you would have to replace is the rod and cap. The crank is fine, it just needs to be cleaned. None of what you can see on the crank journal is actually material from the crank. It is bearing and aluminum material from the rod/cap/bearings. It will come right off with a very weak acid. Plus, Mustie1 is special. Mustie could EASILY make 10 thousand dollars on the video. He probably is making North of 25 grand a month. He has a half a million subs and his videos get 10s of thousands of views. For Mustie1, it would be "worth it" to even buy brand new crank and rod and piston. Really, replacing every single part on the machine would be "worth it" because the end product is a youtube video, not a low end snowblower. IMHO, I think it is more interesting to watch it be repaired than torn down and made into a parts pile.
@tarstarkusz2 жыл бұрын
@@facel2 1) That failure was not that violent. There is no damage to anything else. 2) You are making an economics argument that makes zero sense given the end product is a youtube video.All his major costs are FIXED. The marginal cost of a video is very low. 3) Most things people do are not "economically viable" anyway. 60-% of people (or more, that's a low end) are losing money to do any kind of repair on anything Repairing almost anything makes no sense from an economic point of view even if the parts are FREE. Most people earn far more money on an hourly basis than they can save fixing something. If it is worth fixing at all, it is almost always more economically viable to have someone else do it. It will take them FAR longer than someone with the right tools and knowledge than it will take the average person. If you're a lawyer fixing a lawnmower, you are throwing away money. A hobby is the ONLY justification for fixing this stuff. Now, if you're a small engine repair person or even an auto mechanic, not so much.
@chrisszumelda31892 жыл бұрын
Mustie1 talks the talk; more importantly he does the actual work. I wish I had him as a neighbor. Keep up the great work.
@Mikefngarage2 жыл бұрын
Those small snow blowers are really handy.....They dont take up much garage or shed space and can be pretty mean on a smaller drive or walkway. OMG. I used one in Toronto and was totally impressed.
@sicfifty34012 жыл бұрын
Hey mustie,,I am addicted to picking up these damn mowers on the side of the road,,today I got another one ,30 minute later she's running like a new one ,,all thanks to the mustie one
@vettekid33262 жыл бұрын
I had a friend that bought a brand new gas powered air compressor and he did add the oil to the compressor but assumed the engine had oil in it when it didn't. On tear down the Briggs looked pretty much like that and yes he put oil in it after at blew up too.
@RadioReprised2 жыл бұрын
I had a 53 M38 I put a 67 327 Vette motor in it and it could lift the front wheels when you popped the clutch!
@bcgrittner80762 жыл бұрын
A military Jeep with seven grill slots? The fender configuration also looks newer than 1953. Ah, yes. The old Jeep interchangeability can of worms. Good luck. Too bad about the snow blower. I own a similar unit. I change the oil, change the paddles, and change the belt. So far, so good.
@mattbrown55112 жыл бұрын
A machine that even Mustie couldn't save. At least, he has parts to save other machines. Thank you, Darrin, for showing us this.
@MrSoppysod2 жыл бұрын
I so love your videos. I've been tinkering around with engines and classic cars here in the UK for decades and am just about to rebuild a B&S 4hp motor from my garden rotorvator.
@billrey82212 жыл бұрын
You know what I like about this video, is ALL that clean aluminum for scrap!
@tolbaszy80672 жыл бұрын
This was probably used to clean the snow off a pond for skating, and went through the ice. Hopefully, the operator had enough sense to let go.
@seastacker85822 жыл бұрын
Possible, but hydro lock is instant. This one had to have been running a while to make that big end of the rod look like that. That said, I’m sure there is more than one lake around the north with a snowblower sitting at the bottom.😂
@Mark.R_2 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I think. It had to be running and went swimming to break the rod.
@thomaswaldorf91412 жыл бұрын
I Wounder if it had breakin oil? And was never changed.
@Donnybrook102 жыл бұрын
excellent theory
@10minutenewhampshirebreak772 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@JerseyFishing202 жыл бұрын
Your videos are the best and should be an example to everyone on how a KZbin video should be!! You don’t start every video begging people to like and subscribe as if we all don’t know how KZbin works or something. Anyways love love the videos keep ‘em coming!! Thank you!
@gregcromer84062 жыл бұрын
I loved this video. It took me back to my Power Mechanics class in high school 40 years ago. Thanks Mustie as always!
@AndrewHCann2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video Mustie 1 :) also you did check out what happened and excellent to find too ! I enjoy to!
@CristiNeagu2 жыл бұрын
15 minutes in, here's my guess: It was left in a basement, as you said, the basement got flooded, water got into the crankcase. Then the owner tried to start it to see if it still runs, it probably did start up, but then because of all the water in the crankcase it hydro locked the piston from behind. I bet that the bent valve that doesn't quite work is an exhaust valve. Piston was on its way down after ignition, connecting rod gave out, and the exhaust valve slammed into the top of the piston, pushing it in the position you found it in.
@alan68322 жыл бұрын
I had governor failure like he talked about but external windvane type, but mine survived just because the carburetor was small enough to keep it from self destructing before I could shut it down and fix it. Dirty air filter might have helped.
@kendonahve9242 жыл бұрын
I can't agree with immersion/hydraulic failure scenario. Too much scoring of the crankshaft throw. Extended downhill run till failure imo... possible low oil level..
@CristiNeagu2 жыл бұрын
@@kendonahve924 Well, when I wrote that we weren't that far in with the tear down.
@tempusveritas89012 жыл бұрын
Thanks Mustie 1 I own one like that. It's a perfect Deck snowblower. Now you have me Worried! 2 Winters so far so good.
@VB-bk1lh5 ай бұрын
I was given one of those things about 7 years ago, brand new, never run. It still had the bottle of oil and hang tag on it from the store where it was bought. It never had any fuel in it. I tried to sell it but found no takers as we don't get much snow here these days. I put the oil in it, ran it a bit, gave it an oil change with good synthetic oil and put it in the garage with an empty fuel tank. We got some snow and i got to try it out a few years back, It ran for about a hour cleaning my driveway of about 5" of snow. I put it back in the garage, and after we didn't get any snow by March, I drained the fuel tank and ran the carb out of gas. It sat for two years after that. I grabbed it one day and figured I'd 'exercise the motor for a bit since it had sat so long. I checked the oil and it was overfull, and looked like milkshake. It was in the garage and the garage don't leak. I changed the oil, twice to be sure I got it all out, then ran it a bit and let it warm up. It again turned the oil milky. I changed the oil again, this time flushing the motor out with gas and then two more oil changes. After running it for 10 minutes it again turned the oil milky. I opened the motor thinking it had to have something inside that was either foaming the oil or holding moisture but it was all fine. If I change the oil, let it sit, it turns milky just sitting , it don't even have to run. I gave up on it and put the motor on the shelf stripped and junked the rest of it.
@SMKreitzer19682 жыл бұрын
Thanks for taking the time to diagnose the failure Mustie1!
@pglick1232 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you stopped using a screwdriver and got out the hone! I want to see it work again!
@pglick1232 жыл бұрын
I just saw the crank, never mind!
@peacefrog05212 жыл бұрын
I have this same model, I’ve used it the past 2 or 3 winters; my Dad had it before that. Needs a carb cleaning every so often but the electric start is a big relief on my arm. It’s lightweight and easily maneuverable, I can easily lift onto & off my elevated front porch to clear it. I can almost dance with it. It clears my 100-ft driveway with no issues. It’s the only gas-powered tool I have; everything else is either corded or battery electric. I hope mine has a better run than this one did; I can’t tell if it’s the same engine.
@cm58382 жыл бұрын
I have a theory, someone bought it, threw gas in and ran it. Not long after it started knocking due to no oil, so they add oil in a useless attempt to save it but it let go. The water could be a few things, flooded basement, ice dammed and snow melt ran back into it. I think even you would be amazed at how many items come into my shop that never got oil or a 2 stroke ran on straight gas
@JohnBarrometti2 жыл бұрын
The Manual Says No Internal Parts Available,So what you Have is A Parts Unit For the Hord,I had one come to me with the adjustment valve mechanism stripped so I used a heli coil and fixed it.
@xcalibre2222 жыл бұрын
When those 4 cycle paddle snowblowers work they work Great! That's all I use here in Northern Illinois. It's nice not having to mix oil and gas. Just filler up and go. :) Thanks for the Vids as always!
@Iceeeen2 жыл бұрын
That thing look salvageable. New rod (cheap on the internet) polish the rood and hone the cylinder. Good to go
@LordCeeJay2 жыл бұрын
FINALLY I get to watch a video. I don't watch when they are over an hour long.
@luisesquerdo67342 жыл бұрын
aaaaa! I saw that jeep and my heart skipped a bit 😆 Love to see you getting your hands on that. You are the best thanks 😊
@YukonHawk12 жыл бұрын
Happy Sunday morning to you Mustie. I had a cup of coffee and a bagel while you entertained me. Great job of trying to determine the cause of death on that blower.
@helderferreira81122 жыл бұрын
I love all ur videos because to me it’s like being in class the way you involve us the audience with questions and ideas it’s like being the with you on that project!!! Keep up the great work!!!
@bombardier3qtrlbpsi2 жыл бұрын
You must have the parts in your stash I say let's get it running. Here's 👍👍 for getting the snowblower running.
@u.p.tinkering2 жыл бұрын
Ouch! They knew by the sound it made to just drag it to the curb. lol Great video!!! :)
@mikeshobbiesandrandomstuff2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for having me over bud good to see you
@growitplantit43902 жыл бұрын
You’re just easy to watch! Your knowledge comes second. Thanks for the movie length entertaining tutorials.
@danthemowermedic44442 жыл бұрын
I had 2 of these come in last winter for repair with the same problem. Broken crank. My assumption was that the plastic gear on the cam spun throwing the timing off while in use and the valves came in contact with the piston and snapped the rod. With the damage on the piston, id say the same for this one.
@dannyjamison83372 жыл бұрын
@dan the mower medic. But that doesn't explain the spun bearing, the connecting rod big end was welded to the crank journal. I say it was a lubrication issue
@jamesplotkin46742 жыл бұрын
@@dannyjamison8337 No bearing to spin. This simply looks like it ran out of oil and self-destructed. Then, they put some oil in it and realized then it was junk. Stowed in low area and filled with water.
@tct722 жыл бұрын
The marks on the piston on this one was caused by the screw driver he had in the plug hole. My guess due to these being rather cheap snow blowers is there wasn't enough oil clearance between rod and crank and it tore itself apart. Manufacturing defect.
@keithparady25942 жыл бұрын
Yeah u definitely deserve more recognition for the stuff that you do u have no idea how many times I reverted to ur videos when trying to troubleshoot something ur killing it man keep up the great work man
@deanfischer34022 жыл бұрын
Workin on any small motor is instructive. Thanks do more and what to save off the trashed blo
@MrYukon20102 жыл бұрын
A quick and dirty autopsy, I love it 😀
@larryblair47652 жыл бұрын
Mustie, long time fan 1st time caller, my best diagnoses is that oil was insufficient and the rod galded on the crank journal. As far as the stuck valve , I believe that was due to the water damage. Man I love your videos. I have a small engine shop and when I got a mystery I check you and ol Terrell dactyl! You guys are awesome.
@jamierushing88112 жыл бұрын
Hi Mustie from west Alabama ty for your show
@richardcavalloro83552 жыл бұрын
That's a nice Willys at the end there. I used to take mine to the show in Weare.
@FairwayPD2 жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr. Mustie for allowing us to observe the autopsy
@tedheierman11812 жыл бұрын
A new piston and rod; and she's good to go! Get this thing running!
@jeremyschreier57012 жыл бұрын
Mustie you could probably clean the bearing journal with Muriatic acid to remove the aluminum and save the crank. toss another rod and piston on and you got a winner!
@notajp2 жыл бұрын
Done that a couple of times…..
@buddyreed26232 жыл бұрын
With the way you save things, I thought you would have saved the wheels. Have good days!
@bennyt.christensen39702 жыл бұрын
I sure like that 38A M1 😁👍👏 I saw the tire at sek. 08 upper left corner and was waiting to see the story behind it? Thx. 😉
@mistermacgray2 жыл бұрын
Lots of good parts to get from it such as pulleys, belt, switch, recoil starter so not a complete loss, just add it all to the stash.
@Oldjohn522 жыл бұрын
I got up early and had to wait a bit. It's always worth the wait.
@scrappysgarage74042 жыл бұрын
I agree 👍
@vdubaddict28412 жыл бұрын
I'm thinking it was in a basement that flooded and when the engine was shut off last time, the exhaust valve was in the open position. This allowed water to enter the exhaust and then enter the combustion chamber through the open exhaust valve. The owner tried to start it and the piston couldn't compress the water so the weakest link was the arm that broke. The motor free spun after that so the motor never ran after the water came in (this is why there is no signs of heat). I haven't figured out the water with the oil though. Great video Mustie.
@howarddykes76742 жыл бұрын
Don’t think it flooded in a basement, there is no rust or tide marks on the outside of the machine!! Still enjoy your vids, thanks Mustie.
@stuinNorway2 жыл бұрын
When you mentioned the posibility of someone running with no oil, reminded me of a vibrator plate I bought. User manual states "Ships without oil, fill according to engine manual" . . it didn't come with engine manual to tell me how much to add (or confirm where).. Much searching I find their tiller used same engine, and THAT manual said to add however much oil it needs. Went to add oil, glad I added carefully, as it was shipped with oil in it..... Sometimes the manufacturers don't help us "mere mortal" owners look after the stuff.
@Inisfad2 жыл бұрын
I find the dismantling portion of these videos very satisfying and relaxing. Of course, if one was to put everything back together again, I wouldn’t remember where anything went….lol
@818garage2 жыл бұрын
I keep seeing the little green boat motor under the bench and wonder 🤔 when will you get back to working on it and what you will find to put it in, but as always, excellent job on the find and video.
@TgWags692 жыл бұрын
I have the two stroke version of this. more often than not, it never makes it further than the side of the garage for our two week summer. Downspouts get clogged with oak blossoms and whirlgigs in the spring and overflows right onto the lawnmowers and snow blowers 😉👍
@blake82972 жыл бұрын
Mustie going over to a friends house... "You got anything that doesn't work?"
@lrrromicronpersei82942 жыл бұрын
That engine is the story of my life piston broke lol… another interesting video thanks Mustie
@frankvucolo62492 жыл бұрын
Couldn’t believe it, but this unit sells for $800 new at the orange box! Worth fixing? About $100 for new piston and rod parts. Another $90 for a crank if you can’t clean up the old one. Need some gaskets and a lot of time restoring that head. Probably worth fixing for someone who wanted to use it. Fixing for resale would be a crap shoot, at best. Then again, good luck buying a snow blower this winter with supply chain issues. I ordered a Honda from my local dealer in April to be ready for this winter. That got me on the “maybe” list!
@donnie25332 жыл бұрын
Great video glad you posted keep them coming thanks
@IHcubcadet2 жыл бұрын
Good stuff. Grabbed an Identical machine off the street side yesterday it does have compression and oil but the gas smells like it’s super old can’t wait to see if it runs.
@jexsmx66082 жыл бұрын
believe you're spot-on with the toro diagnosis. very little wear so suspect minimal hours on it. looks like it was run with LOW oil until the rod bearing blew. water came later. nice parts machine. nice jeep. had one of those f-head 134s in my willys truck. the engines weren't very resilient. any overspeed would kill them in short order.
@panzerabwerkanone2 жыл бұрын
The tilt of the cylinder in the snow blower engine makes me believe it would make a good candidate for a DIY moped project.
@acts_of_random_kindness50182 жыл бұрын
Only time oil and water mixes is if there is no air present, at least I seen videos on that mixing in vacuum chamber, glad you are doing well mustie.
@renem64412 жыл бұрын
Guess will never know what killed it!! Thanks for sharing!
@michaelreynolds19042 жыл бұрын
Nice to have a short video once and a while. Great content! Now lets get back on that red car!
@marcryvon2 жыл бұрын
Short or longer, Sunday morning with him is a must !
@charlestaylor35442 жыл бұрын
@@marcryvon You forgot the “ie” on must!😜
@jandyke99952 жыл бұрын
Dr Mustie, great detective work
@jimmysteelart2 жыл бұрын
That's what you get with a Chinese Honda! They should be called hit and miss engines. Sometimes they last for ever, or not. Also, good example as to why you should always store your small engines on the compression stroke. Keeping the valves closed will help keep water/moisture out of the cyl.
@pettyfogger23052 жыл бұрын
Good one, Mustie. Short and sweet.
@lucenmarcosgarage56492 жыл бұрын
Sunday 1PM (local time), Musti1 time. That M38A1 is a cool project. We're rebuilding one on our channel as we speak. Sadly our video's are in Dutch so kinda hard for you English native speakers.
@barrymcbride2 жыл бұрын
@luc an Marco's Garage after reading your comment I was curious and checked out your channel to my surprise closed captioning has auto generated subtitles in English. Cool I will check out more on your channel cheers from Ontario Canada
@lucenmarcosgarage56492 жыл бұрын
@@barrymcbride thanks for your comment Barry. Did not know that it subtitled our videos. Hope you had fun watching our video's.
@bobmillerick3002 жыл бұрын
Sweet Jeep. Would love to see that running again.
@rogerborg2 жыл бұрын
It's beautiful to watch this, and yet also tragic that we've reached the point where we just throw these things away and buy another one from China rather than fixing them - or even putting in a few hours of time to learn how to do it.
@cusoonmyfriend37382 жыл бұрын
name the ppl who did this to us , banksters , which are also ..fake vaccine manufacturers, which are also, assassins
@BeingMe232 жыл бұрын
Why fix it when it cost nearly the same as a new one. Now if a person is handy with engine rebuilding then its a good deal.
@cusoonmyfriend37382 жыл бұрын
@@BeingMe23 why grow your own vegetables when u can buy poisoned ones from monsento ?
@dontblameme63282 жыл бұрын
They will keep making cheap junk as long as there's idiots willing to buy cheap junk.
@cusoonmyfriend37382 жыл бұрын
@@dontblameme6328 this
@mischef182 жыл бұрын
Well sure made for a great video bro, the Jeep at the end looks neat. Safe travels
@THEPAPASMURFTHEOG2 жыл бұрын
if it needs fixed, nobody else can fix like how mustie1 does things! outstanding videos sir!
@whitesapphire58652 жыл бұрын
It would be nice to see the Jeep when it's up and running again! Patrick Tipton is your Jeep guru ("Portrayal Press" channel). Snowblower..... Hmm, could be that it was run low on oil, bound up on the big-end and tore it out, someone added oil after the fact (the Bugnaration Factor) and then left for a while gathering dust. Following that, it could have brought out with a view to fix it, or maybe sell it, and the owner pressure washed it, forcing water into the exhaust, and up into the cylinder via the open valve - especially if the job was entrusted to the kids! They'd love squirting water into a little hole and see it disappear. It doesn't look like it was under water, it's too clean, there's no rust to speak of, and no precipitated dirt on any part of it. On top of that, there are no tell-tale tide marks to Indicate the levels as the water rose and fell. First ever water cooled snowblower in history?
@joolwing2 жыл бұрын
A nice quick video - now off to the antique truck show Brooklyn CT!!
@phillipsharpe64592 жыл бұрын
Sunday morning with mustie brilliant, that must have gone with a bang , spare parts for days, 😂🤣👍
@lauriemcdougall84152 жыл бұрын
that was fun!! :} I really enjoy watching you work on small engines
@curbmassa2 жыл бұрын
I read somewhere that snowblowers get the most engine damage when people jam if into a snow bank, the engine goes full throttle and then they push way down on the handle while it's wide open and starve the conrod for oil which might have been low to begin with.
@BeingMe232 жыл бұрын
Unless the oil dipper breaks the rod won't starve for oil. Keep in mind that many walk behind mowers die at WOT in tall grass.
@curbmassa2 жыл бұрын
@@BeingMe23 It'll starve if it's low on oil as they often are and as Í stated.
@rorannerusan2 жыл бұрын
Hey mustie1 that would have been a great engine to rebuild . It even had electric start. Anywho great vid.
@scvic20062 жыл бұрын
I worked on one of those last winter for a friend. One of the jets was rusted shut so it would start but not idle. Person left it with a full tank of gas from the previous winter. Tried to install a gas shutoff but there really wasn’t any place between tank and carb. It runs now though. :)
@AnthonyRBlacker2 жыл бұрын
One nice thing, it's pretty simple to disassemble.. other than the longest bolt in the world holding the gas tank on.. nice video
@GrahamLeach2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the autopsy . It was a lot of fun .
@eugenepolan17502 жыл бұрын
The oil didn't look clean, so I think it had some hours running with oil. As you noted, there didn't seem to be low/no oil damage throughout the engine. Could it have been stored after a flood, with water in the crankcase and the rod journal sitting in the water? This could have caused corrosion that, when they ran the snowblower the next winter, caused the rod to seize to the crank and snap. If it sat another year, the oil and water would have separated again.
@josephcormier59742 жыл бұрын
Excellent video to bad you can't turn the crank and put a new push rod in and get it running still a lot of good part's there five stars my friend thank you for sharing
@Roadhardd2 жыл бұрын
If it was run when new without oil, wouldn’t the cylinder wall be scored up, cam shaft, etc?
@pinwizz692 жыл бұрын
Looks like Mr. Mustie1 Darren has a nice bunch of stuff to add to his parts collection. A nice little carb, gas tank, starter, hardware and more.
@Gordonseries3852 жыл бұрын
👍 Nice little bike engine. Enjoyed watching, Take Care!
@stans52702 жыл бұрын
I would bet with the right-sized VW engine installed, that thing would be a snow-throwing beast.
@harveylong58782 жыл бұрын
those big box store toro's were POS out of the box. lucky they managed to clear light fluffy powder snow maybe 3 inches deep
@lawrencewheeler88682 жыл бұрын
Add a 36 hp!!!! Lol
@bombardier3qtrlbpsi2 жыл бұрын
Those one stage snowblowers are supposed to work pretty good. Great job thanks for sharing
@harveylong58782 жыл бұрын
supposed being the optimal word. anything over 3 inches light powder, it's pretty much useless
@garyswanson18072 жыл бұрын
Sunday morning, coffee and Mustie. PERFECT
@DeWittPotts2 жыл бұрын
I agree that this does not look like it has many hours on it. I live in Upstate NY and last year I used my snowblower no more than 3 times for about 30 minutes each. It really depends on the winter you have and the past few years have been relatively mild with more rain than snow. This may have run low on oil but I doubt it because the oil that you poured out did not look like it had just been added. It looked like oil that had been in the machine for a while. These machines don't tend to use a lot of oil. My snowblower is about 3 years old and the oil level is still on the mark. The water is curious and could be the key to what happened to the machine.
@goldbunny19732 жыл бұрын
Upvote & thanks from Glasgow; UK Law changed July 2021 making
@fitzfitz28012 жыл бұрын
i had a 44 willys i gave to my brother in law last year as it had not ran in over 30 years but when it did we would briing it to the dunes and climb hills these big monster trucks could not no throwing rooster tails but it went places no one else could go the true 4 wheel drive no limited slip crap here and thin military tires too