Re: Briggs engine in Toro Snowthrower Governor Issue
2023/08/22 15:20:30
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If, as you say, it has no manual speed control, then how (see No. 2) is it that you say you are manually speeding it up and slowing it down?
In response to No. 3, you say that the RPMs don't go back to idle. The goal of a governor is not to increase or decrease the RPM; it is to provide a constant RPM. By way of example, assuming the desired RPM is 3600, as you load the engine, the RPM starts to drop to, let's say, 3200, so the governor opens the throttle to get back up to 3600. Similarly, if I stop the auger and thereby remove the load, the RPM will momentarily increase to, let's say, 3800, before the governor brings it back down to 3600. It does not try to idle the motor.
I suspect that you simply have the governor set too high, or maybe your ears are not used to what 3600 sounds like. Set it lower, if it makes you more comfortable, but try to find a way to measure the RPM. You can buy these cheap ($15) little RPM/hour meter devices. It's easy to install, and you don't have to permanently mount it. Just wrap the sensor wire around the spark plug wire, start the motor, read the RPM, set the governor to whatever you like, and remove the unit. You can find the recommended RPM in the snow blower manual. It's probably 3600, but I've seen lower recommended numbers (3200, for example) for companies that can't reach their emission target at 3600.
One more lesson, but I'm sure you've learned it already: Never throw away old parts, until you're sure the new parts are working as expected.