will it run? 1943 Briggs & Stratton model ZZ engine

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  • Опубликовано: 13 сен 2018
  • I was given thisBriggs & Stratton model ZZ engine from a fan for a future project. it was given to him but never got it running. so how about you pull up a chair hold the flashlight and see if we can get it to run.
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Комментарии • 2,7 тыс.

  • @crx350x1
    @crx350x1 3 года назад +45

    Back when Engines were solid metal and they weren't thrown away after 5 years.

    • @raymondgarafano8604
      @raymondgarafano8604 3 года назад +2

      I think the cast iron jobs are more quiet? don't vibrate like aluminum blocks.

    • @simonchaddock3694
      @simonchaddock3694 2 года назад

      Anything made nowadays is inferia to what was made in pre second ww no question better materials were used i thunk

    • @keithschneidly3922
      @keithschneidly3922 2 года назад

      Pre, planned obselescense era that we live in.

    • @SkigBiggler
      @SkigBiggler 2 года назад

      @@simonchaddock3694 things nowadays are certainly lower quality, but the Second World War led to a lot of advancements in technology that resulted in better products, since they needed to produce engines and whatnot for the war. Unfortunately, companies seem to think they have some sort of right to keep making money selling the same shit over and over again.

  • @73honda350
    @73honda350 5 лет назад +57

    I always enjoy the vids in which a 50-70+ year old engine is coaxed back to life. Those old engines may not be as efficient as today's ohv engines, but they sure were simple, durable, overbuilt and easy to maintain and repair with a few simple hand tools

    • @michaelmontgomery5818
      @michaelmontgomery5818 5 лет назад +3

      You could not lug those babies down, either!

    • @tcmtech7515
      @tcmtech7515 5 лет назад +3

      Sadly most of those old engines are now more fuel efficient than pretty much all of these modern emissions complaint ones.
      Back in the day all the big name engine manufactures bragged about their Hp/Hrs per gallon numbers. Today that's the last thing engine manufacturers want you to see because emissions compliance regulations makes them nothing worth bragging about.

  • @umaxen0048
    @umaxen0048 5 лет назад +127

    A 1945 Briggs will start, but a 2 year old Home Depot engine is disposable once it stops running...

    • @overbuiltautomotive1299
      @overbuiltautomotive1299 4 года назад +1

      if you need a good weed eater shindaiwa t302 or ? they are made the same as years ago except fer the old carb is better but one can buy that style via ebay after the new goes bad i guess

    • @79tazman
      @79tazman 4 года назад +8

      I use to go around on junk days and pick up all the lawn mowers bring them home get them going and sell them for 50 bucks usually it's something small to get the thing going again. I use to sell them so fast at 50 bucks I could not keep up people would come and want to buy one when I sold them all I made lot's of money of lawn mowers and got all of them for free some would give me there old mower and by one off me and I would have the one they gave me running the next day ready to be sold LOL!!

    • @johnhand7272
      @johnhand7272 4 года назад +19

      No such thing as a 'disposable' engine. 9 times out of 10 they stop running due to a fault so simple a kid could fix it. Unfortunately these days, the average citizen struggles putting the right fuel in the tank..

    • @Tractors101
      @Tractors101 4 года назад +3

      I love working on old engines, it's too bad how few people today share this hobby.

    • @desertbob6835
      @desertbob6835 4 года назад +5

      Chinese Home Despot engines have plastic con rods. Can't expect much from a chain run by s rabid trumptard.

  • @gusracette4378
    @gusracette4378 5 лет назад +12

    Found your channel about 1 month ago & am thoroughly impressed on how knowledgeable and fearless you are. I've watched about 30 of your vids and it doesn't seem to matter what equipment or vehicle it is your up for the challenge. I find it fascinating especially in this day and age where good mechanics are a dying breed. You have an inquisitive mind, a "knack" for troubleshooting and more importantly a gift for repairing stuff from the most simple to the more complex. Great stuff.....be well and tx for entertaining and teaching us.

  • @vettekid3326
    @vettekid3326 5 лет назад +39

    35 years ago my father in law worked for a strip mine that was changing over from B&S to Wisconsin for their utility engines and literally threw out all the existing B&S parts and left over engines. including parts for some of the Z series engines. We were able to put together 5 working industrial engines and built three log splitters with them since the engines are built for stationary applications that need high torque and long run times. One of the old engines we fixed had a tag on it that said " locked up" and it turned out that someone had crushed the shroud into the flywheel and once freed the engine fired right up. Coal mines were a great source for tools & materials since they threw anything away if they weren't using them. They bought some electric impacts once but they only place they could use them was in the small vehicle maintenance garage so brand new they put them in the dumpster. I used that Rockwell impact for years for busting lugnuts loose.

    • @Elandycamino
      @Elandycamino 4 года назад

      Sounds like my David Bradley walk behind I thought the continental engine was seized for years here it had a bolt stuck in the flywheel wish I would have known this 17 years ago

  • @heatherbrown2761
    @heatherbrown2761 5 лет назад +36

    I just want to say that there are women that watch your channel as well. I enjoy watching you repair these machines, allows me to brush up on my knowledge without having to get greasy myself. :P Thank you =)

  • @jeanettebooth1581
    @jeanettebooth1581 3 года назад

    Mustie I has been most helpful to me getting mentally through COVID-19 🤗 . I always admired those who could repair small engines. And you are the best! Greg from Halifax S

  • @kyleedwards893
    @kyleedwards893 5 лет назад +4

    Love watching you work on these old motors. It helps me a lot on my projects

  • @makdgto1
    @makdgto1 5 лет назад +493

    Nice to see it running I had it for 5 years and just never got to messing with. I knew you would get it going. I hope you make something real cool with it. I'm trying to get the ID plate for you.

    • @mustie1
      @mustie1  5 лет назад +96

      thanks again mike for sending this my way, l had fun firing it up

    • @frankdeegan8974
      @frankdeegan8974 5 лет назад +6

      Even a picture of the plate ?

    • @rustyrepairs2565
      @rustyrepairs2565 5 лет назад +16

      Thanks Mike.

    • @djr11472
      @djr11472 5 лет назад +39

      Thanks Mike for sharing this with the rest of us (via Mustie). Cool engine.

    • @danielfisch655
      @danielfisch655 5 лет назад +28

      Michael Dulaney it was very generous of you to give the old girl to Mustie and she's a beauty.

  • @ProjectFarm
    @ProjectFarm 5 лет назад +257

    Mustie1, You are the ultimate engine doctor! You amaze me with your ability to get these old engines running. Nicely done, and I love the sound of that old Briggs!

    • @pdavidwichner4285
      @pdavidwichner4285 5 лет назад +12

      @TheJR1948 but hey he does get them to run right?

    • @BryanM362
      @BryanM362 5 лет назад +20

      @TheJR1948 Are you kidding? He does wonders with the engines he works on! Everyone is a critic....

    • @badhorse1640
      @badhorse1640 5 лет назад +4

      But can he get them to run on kerosene

    • @BryanM362
      @BryanM362 5 лет назад +3

      @@badhorse1640 But why would he want to?

    • @ChuckWood
      @ChuckWood 5 лет назад +7

      Will baby oil work as engine oil?

  • @paulsawyer4541
    @paulsawyer4541 Год назад

    I love the sound of an old one lung. Makes me smile 😁. Built my first motor bike using a Briggs & Stratton off an old reel type lawn mower. Mounted to a bicycle frame, a two inch pulley on the motor and a twenty inch pulley made from a bike rim on the back. A string from the engine up around the goose neck to the handle bar with a loop for your finger was the throttle. Push it to get going and drag your feet to stop 😂 it's a wonder I'm still alive

  • @RichardLWhite
    @RichardLWhite 3 года назад +2

    Haha nice ol thumper ya got there. Makes my day to hear that sweet old iron run. Thanks for bringing another one back from the dead.

  • @chrisbartrum3201
    @chrisbartrum3201 5 лет назад +7

    Always a pleasure to hang out.

  • @bigmac965
    @bigmac965 5 лет назад +145

    "Carburetor float for a 1943 Briggs? Sure, I have one over here!" Gotta love the stash! Neat old engine! Beefy too! It's spitting fire! Can't wait to see it on something down the road! (Loving the captioning you're doing, Mustie!)

    • @edwardwerick2420
      @edwardwerick2420 5 лет назад +2

      One of the things that makes the "stash" work (I have one too) is that Briggs used that Flo-jet carb for a
      loooooooong time!

    • @jamesmisamore8681
      @jamesmisamore8681 5 лет назад

      bigmac965 Is

    • @wailnshred
      @wailnshred 4 года назад

      That's why it pays to keep parts that are hard to get.

  • @davepalmatier5190
    @davepalmatier5190 4 года назад

    I HAVE A 3-4 HORSE OLD BRIGGS FROM THE 40S I'M GUESSING, THE FARMER HAD IT IN HIS BARN, HIS SON GAVE IT TO ME WHEN I WAS 7-8 YEARS OLD STILL HAVE IT!! I LOVE ANYTHING OLD, LOVE YOUR CHANNEL, MAKES ME FEEL LIKE A KID AGAIN!! THAT'S ALL I DID WAS DRAG STUFF HOME AND FIGURED OUT HOW IT WORKED!!

  • @richardfroud5947
    @richardfroud5947 4 года назад +3

    Mustie, I’ve learnt more in a day watching your videos, than I learnt in a lifetime of reading manuals. Absolutely brilliant buddy......keep them coming sir.

  • @aidanconger7350
    @aidanconger7350 5 лет назад +101

    Love the “will it run” series!!!

    • @Niterider73
      @Niterider73 5 лет назад +3

      Same here!

    • @amtrak713productions8
      @amtrak713productions8 5 лет назад +3

      Same

    • @danmackintosh6325
      @danmackintosh6325 5 лет назад +3

      Same too, but the title really needs to be addressed. On this channel it's not a case of "will it run?" because it will! It's more a case of "when will it run?"

    • @888johnmac
      @888johnmac 5 лет назад +2

      dan mackintosh ... yeah, these should be renamed something like.... how much Mustie Magic is needed

  • @HandToolRescue
    @HandToolRescue 5 лет назад +214

    Love the sound on this one.

    • @nickbanaszek
      @nickbanaszek 5 лет назад +5

      How the workshop coming?

    • @ckeller07
      @ckeller07 5 лет назад +4

      Thump Thump Thump!!!!

    • @NenadKralj
      @NenadKralj 5 лет назад +4

      Hello - I'm a live :D (that exhaust is fantastic)

    • @buder5116
      @buder5116 5 лет назад

      loving the weird sound HYPE !!

    • @henriquecorrea1562
      @henriquecorrea1562 5 лет назад

      Oh! it's great to see you here, HTM! =D

  • @merlinashland5136
    @merlinashland5136 2 года назад +1

    Always a pleasure to tag along with you repairing and running the almost impossible engines and the world’s worse chainsaws. You transfer your confidence to all of us who need help and good advice about the way to fix our weekend toys. You are the best of the best. M

  • @paulsimmons390
    @paulsimmons390 2 года назад

    Wow you sure have the Ability and know how to get these old engines running. I enjoy tour constant chuckle and laugh. What an up beat guy. Love watching you wrench
    .

  • @MitzvosGolem1
    @MitzvosGolem1 5 лет назад +116

    When I was 12 my little bro and I found a bunch of 16hp iron Briggs singles. I got one started and it was stuck full speed on concrete garage floor......it went crazy chipping cement knocking stuff over no exhaust...we ran out of shop.....lol

    • @davidbumpus3457
      @davidbumpus3457 5 лет назад +22

      You resurrected a beast and it didn't like that. You have to be cautious when practicing necromancy!

    • @erswnn
      @erswnn 5 лет назад +12

      Well...that bets the time I blew up the garage floor. Twice. I had no idea that concrete will explode if you hold a torch to it for an extended period. Dad wasn't too mad about the first one....it was the second one that got his goat.

    • @milantrcka121
      @milantrcka121 4 года назад

      I have not laughed this hard for a long time (sorry). Perfect movie in my head. I see myself in the same spot.

  • @samwisegamgee289
    @samwisegamgee289 5 лет назад +20

    I LOVE THE SOUND OF THE MUSTIE 1 CACKLE WHEN AN ENGINE FIRES

  • @ta65mail
    @ta65mail 4 года назад +3

    Great seeing how these old carburetors are made & function. Interesting video.

  • @bbishoppcm
    @bbishoppcm 3 года назад

    Greetings from Southen NH! Working on restoring my Grandfather’s 1937 Briggs model A... it sat for decades behind his shed, and after tearing it down, it looks promising.

  • @richardthomas9263
    @richardthomas9263 5 лет назад +6

    I love seeing classic engines brought back to life. I also love the simplicity of their design.

  • @bbrut3332
    @bbrut3332 5 лет назад +14

    Hell that engine is older than dirt or me. Congrats on finding the solder glob and getting sparky unleashed. I really enjoy your escapades.

  • @danmoreton1788
    @danmoreton1788 5 лет назад +3

    The whole process reminds me of when I was a kid,(50 + years) when I worked on go karts engines. They were pretty straight forward and if you took your time and eliminated problems one by one you could get the darn things to run. Thanks for the video, it reminded me of my childhood!

  • @mandostudent
    @mandostudent 5 лет назад

    You took me back 60 years when my grandfather would work on his farm engines like this one. The engines sounded the same but my grandfather's language was a little harsher and he didn't laugh as much! Thank you! Joe Butler

  • @alwoolhouse6255
    @alwoolhouse6255 5 лет назад +3

    Superb tutorial, real time problem solving is a joy to watch. You're an inspiration.

  • @niceguy2171
    @niceguy2171 5 лет назад +78

    Nice old low torque engine, and I had one on a 1940's 'scooter' which was actually like a Cushman style long one. It had one that was originally supposed to be around 4 or 5HP but supposedly someones kid blew that motor up, so a guy way back when took a motor off a old military generator that had the same bolt pattern and output shaft, and was thought to be around 8HP. When I got it running well that really moved! With the old pulley setup for a transmission, you could get it up to like 50MPH..and it got there fast! One of my dear departed's favorite picture of me was when I came around the corner of the property hell-bent-for-leather on it at a speed safe for no one, without checking the brakes real well, she snapped it w/a big smile on my face, wearing a old leather helmet and goggles(safety 3rd ;) I found in a box of old auction stuff I bought..she just took a camera out of the box and set it up and was going to find a bird or something to try it out and here I came! She even framed it,lol, and later on I donated it to a museum that begged me for it..lifetime free passes for two, since she's gone I can take someone w/me if you want to see it ;)

    • @monicacabrera9269
      @monicacabrera9269 5 лет назад +8

      I'd be willing to go to see the picture...

    • @Chr.U.Cas2216
      @Chr.U.Cas2216 5 лет назад +4

      Dear nice guy 217
      I really would love and appreciate to see it!
      Best regards

    • @vancemacd6315
      @vancemacd6315 5 лет назад +1

      niceguy217 c'

    • @stevesievers1248
      @stevesievers1248 5 лет назад +2

      Niceguy
      That's where ours came from. An old air force generator. My dad put it on our farms survive truck air compressor. it worked better than the old engine that came with it originally because, due to the engines torque, he was able to put on a larger pully and turn the compressor faster with less rpm. In this way, if he needed extra air flow for the job he was working on, he still had throttle to kick up the rpm. When he sold the truck, the buyer said he'd only buy it if the air compressor was included. Took my dad the better part of two years to find another one of those engines.

    • @dogtagx2
      @dogtagx2 5 лет назад

      niceguy217
      I'm sorry for your loss....I too lost my better half just over a year ago and while looking through my old Army pictures I found one that she had taken of me In an old Army Swamp Buggy......It had 6 wheels, 3 on each side (kinda like the old Banana Splits Buggy). I too was giving it all she could about 40 mph and just as I was entering the water hole which was my target of opportunity, my lovely wife and Angel above, snapped the picture as water sprayed about 30 feet in the air as I hydroplaned across.......it had an old 1950's engine that came off of a small sawmill.....and ran off wood gas!!!! it had a boiler/combustion chamber on the back that sat above the engine, and once full of about 80 lbs of wood 2"x 2'" blocks....that motor would pump and stroke with the sound like a Mississippi Paddle boat steam engine. I really miss that old Swamp Buggy.....When I got out of the Army I heard they phased them out too. .

  • @geneo3654
    @geneo3654 4 года назад +3

    Oldie but goodie love seeing old machines come back to life. Gotta love that throaty sound.
    Great job thanks for the ride.

  • @sterlingdavidgrasssr
    @sterlingdavidgrasssr 4 года назад

    I put one of these old motor on an old go cart i made back in 1963 , it ran 37 miles an hour scared the hell out of me ,and it want to go faster. Brought back ole memories, That was 60 Yrs ago Thanks , Texas

  • @twb605
    @twb605 5 лет назад +13

    You are a patient and methodical genius my friend. I am a tinkerer, but not in your class. Good work; enjoy your channel.

  • @Mentorcase
    @Mentorcase 5 лет назад +43

    Motor sounds great, the uncovered spark lead will always leave a wake up call!

    • @sinformant
      @sinformant 5 лет назад +4

      LOL definitely I had an old f150 with a miss and couldn't find it. I had it running while checking over things. Reached up and touched the boot on the coil wire going to the distributor and found a crack in the boot where it was letting the spark jump and grounding out. My arm hurt so bad the rest of the day lol

    • @fillg
      @fillg 5 лет назад +4

      I got zapped by an old rototiller when I was a kid. To shut it off there was a metal strip you pushed over onto the top of the plug to ground it out. I was maybe 5 years old and trying to be my dad's assistant, I just grabbed the thing and wasn't real careful where my hand was going.... ZAP! That's one of my earliest memories and one I'll probably never forget.

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 5 лет назад +3

      yeah, the old metal tab to ground spark was great :))

    • @tarstarkusz
      @tarstarkusz 5 лет назад +3

      How are these small engines able to run for a few seconds (I counted about 20 power strokes) by squirting gas in the head? Why isn't it being pushed out just by pulling the rope? Then when it fires, why doesn't a single power stroke just completely push all the gas out of the engine? This fuel is being put directly into the combustion chamber and not the intake manifold.

    • @Nighthawke70
      @Nighthawke70 5 лет назад +2

      You want a wake up call, try a taste test from a Model T ignition coil. JK! Science class had one hooked up to a vacuum tube for a demonstration of plasma and magnetic fields. I happened to reach over it where the HV lead was at... POW! I was yelping and jumping up and down that HURT! Glad few others saw that and not the whole class.

  • @tombauer7330
    @tombauer7330 4 года назад +2

    Love to see these old engines come back to life. The Reo brought back lots of childhood memories of us using those old lawnmower engines on go-carts and motor bikes. Never did kill one.

  • @FreeFlyFreak69
    @FreeFlyFreak69 2 года назад

    This video is an excellent example of patience, troubleshooting, knowledge and persistence.

  • @BruceBoschek
    @BruceBoschek 5 лет назад +7

    I love the sound of that engine. It's very different than the sound of my Wisconsin AGND. I don't think the newer B&S engines will be up and running in 75 years. That engine is two years younger than I am. Jeez I feel old.

  • @munter10
    @munter10 5 лет назад +14

    Can I make a suggestion . . . when you want to ground the spark plug to check for spark, just use a short length of decent gauge copper wire with aligator clips on each end, on clip on the plug body, the other clip on the motor for ground. So much easier, I've been doing it this way for years and it takes all the frustration out of it lol. Hope that helps. Hey, I love your approach to diagnosing running faults and hard starting, I've been in the game as a pro auto tech for 40 years and I still pick up some tricks from you! Thanks for your daily dedication to educating and entertaing all your subscribers!!

  • @apjdad
    @apjdad 3 года назад +1

    Love to see those old engines live again!

  • @ronsites2694
    @ronsites2694 5 лет назад

    Awesome job on troubleshooting the ignition. That is how an engine should sound! Thanks for the video.

  • @Rico_G
    @Rico_G 5 лет назад +29

    I just love watching the sub count slowly grow. You deserve all the subs you can get.

  • @lucassaaf9183
    @lucassaaf9183 5 лет назад +7

    I love when you make Will it run videos. Keep up the Good work👍

  • @6Twisted
    @6Twisted 2 года назад +1

    I love the sound and simplicity of old engines and how they chug along at low RPMs.

  • @LAP1050
    @LAP1050 5 лет назад +1

    Great fun watching you resurrect old engines. Being able to take something apart cleanup and making it run again. Nothing like the throw away stuff we have these days. Thanks for sharing your knowledge.

  • @chrisclark4813
    @chrisclark4813 5 лет назад +18

    Yep... you've done it again. Fantastic video. Great sounding engine, needs a vintage looking bike frame or how about building one from scratch.
    Left us wanting more with the Crusty trailer. Watch the next episode (Que the SOAP music)
    PS. The extra subtitles are really worthwhile, your commentary is excellent but we all think of extra things we thought we should should have said.
    Keep up the good work. LOL from UK.

    • @chemmerling
      @chemmerling 5 лет назад +3

      The extra subtitles had me laughing pretty good waiting for someone earlier today. Makes people wonder what I'm watching.

  • @gkcooper
    @gkcooper 5 лет назад +19

    Mustie1, my favorite YT channel.

  • @dirtybird2202
    @dirtybird2202 3 года назад +8

    Kit's from back in the day came with a cardboard gauge to set floats, though most people set them by eye. It should set level across when upside down and viewing it from the side looking through the workings. They built things back then to last, not like nowadays. Love the sound those old engines could make. My Mother could overhaul those old engines. She was the first Women to graduate small engine mechanics in Tulsa Vo Tech college back in 1956. My Dad was a Master Mechanic so it runs in the family i guess. She had her picture in the Paper pregnant with me When she Graduated lol.

  • @darrellpickering8535
    @darrellpickering8535 3 года назад +1

    Man, that brings back memories! Worked on 1 back in the late '80s. Ign coil had cracks in it & no spark. Filled 'em with silicone, dressed the points, timed, cleaned the carb & tank & it ran. It's got a long stroke & would be great as a splitter motor.

  • @SteveBrecht
    @SteveBrecht 5 лет назад +47

    Great to see a vid on this so soon as I was really curious about it in the bike show vid. Thanks to the RUclipsr who donated it.
    Edit: Listening to it thump away and all that torque? My thoughts would be an off road trike "chopper". Great to see Crusty has a 'lil crusty now.

    • @jackpatino7069
      @jackpatino7069 5 лет назад +3

      I was thinking trike, too!

    • @pegtooth2006
      @pegtooth2006 5 лет назад +1

      Crusty Jr?

    • @llaeeZ
      @llaeeZ 5 лет назад +1

      Yeah! Make a trike! Moped front with a custom live axle swing arm.

    • @DYLANTRIES
      @DYLANTRIES 5 лет назад

      Have you tried mineral spirits in the ultrasonic cleaner

  • @555chevy
    @555chevy 5 лет назад +6

    Just found your channel, I greatly enjoy to watch you on getting something like this to run again. I am happy when you get a win.

  • @Texas-Chris
    @Texas-Chris 4 года назад +2

    Enjoy all your videos Mustie, you remind me so much of my late Dad. He love turning wrenches on anything!!

  • @stevewynn6937
    @stevewynn6937 2 года назад

    The older the motor the better as far as content goes. Great stuff Mustie.

  • @johnhermes9296
    @johnhermes9296 5 лет назад +7

    When I was a kid me and a friend put a similar Briggs off a corn auger on a big go kart we built that had a an old school bus seat so we could both ride. So much torque it was hard to keep it in chain drives!

  • @greavous93
    @greavous93 5 лет назад +6

    Got to love that exhaust setup!

  • @aaronnelsonmusic5971
    @aaronnelsonmusic5971 4 года назад +26

    You are the Bob Ross of small engines

  • @DagonNaxos
    @DagonNaxos 5 лет назад

    I'd love to sit with you in your shop, shut my mouth and just absorb as much knowledge as I can. You are a wizard at rebuilding carbs and diagnosing spark issues. Thank you so much for posting these videos, as it's sort of like what's described above, but virtually! I've learned an amazing amount just by watching you tinker and get these old, crusty engines running again. Sadly, most of my generation would just throw it away and go buy a new one from China. Also, the treasure trove of parts in your shop reminds me of my father and his two way radio shop. He saves every screw, capacitor, resistor, PA final, switch and connector out of old radios. Whenever something breaks, he always has something to fix it and, half the time, it's something out of another thing that is unrelated to what we're fixing. Anyway, keep doing what you're doing and I'll keep watching. Soon, I'll build myself a shop like yours and continue the adventure!

  • @mr.waynes7555
    @mr.waynes7555 5 лет назад +4

    Good job, I’m right there with you when it comes to old school, that engine is 5 years older than me, I wish I was running as good as that old engine.

  • @bugulater
    @bugulater 5 лет назад +58

    it's amazing that these old 75 year old engines run so well when the ones built today might be good for 10 years!

    • @AntonyJohn71
      @AntonyJohn71 5 лет назад +6

      They don't make em like that anymore. Now is the age of manufactured obsolescence! So they just can sell more stuff. 3/4 of that ends up in non recyclable garbage piles. I suspect that when future civilizations (if they would exist) looks us at, they will mark us as the Garbage civilization, cause that will be the only mark on earth we would have left behind.

    • @Chris-yy7qc
      @Chris-yy7qc 5 лет назад +9

      The secret is to use lots of iron and no plastics/membranes/rubbers/fancy electronics

    • @RagingDong
      @RagingDong 5 лет назад +1

      @@AntonyJohn71 They will ask why we burried all this low grade metal ore, Future generations will be mining garbage piles for plastic, metal and such resources.
      Just need to make sure toxins dont leach into the soil and water,

    • @AureliusR
      @AureliusR 5 лет назад +5

      @@AntonyJohn71 The "they don't make them like that anymore" concept is a complete fallacy. This is a sample size of one. I'm sure these engines had lots of duds returned to the factory, lots of problems at the time. We just don't hear about it anymore because the mechanics are all dead. Also, modern engines actually ARE well engineered. Just like all engines, you need to maintain them, and most people are stupid and don't even get oil changes.
      Plastics and electronics are just as recyclable as metal. The reason we USE plastic is because it can be just as tough as steel, while infinitely recyclable with less energy and materials required.

    • @johnlavezzorio8011
      @johnlavezzorio8011 5 лет назад +3

      Yeah! This engine is the same age as I am. We both run well!

  • @foxwood67
    @foxwood67 5 лет назад

    Don’t know how I got here but liked it. I love tinkering myself and learned a few things. Thanks

  • @burnsmccalman5835
    @burnsmccalman5835 4 года назад +1

    Love learning about old engines as you get them running again

  • @pneumatic00
    @pneumatic00 5 лет назад +28

    In 1986 I bought my first house in North Hollywood, CA and since it had a lawn I needed a lawn mower. I am not sure how or where I got one, but it was a Sears with a rope start that retracted into the flywheel cover so you didn't have to wind it around the notched pulley. Obviously B&S engine with B&S decal. Well, the rope broke at some point. So I figured I would buy the whole assembly, the tin and the retractor reel. I go look up in the phone book (yes, that's what we used) for Briggs & Stratton and practically fell over when I saw that the freaking B&S regional parts distributor was about 6 blocks away. Wow! I drive over with that part in hand and sure enough there's this mid sized concrete block building with BRIGGS & STRATTON painted on the outside. I go inside and it was beautifully grimy, rows and rows of wooden shelves, great big catalog on the counter, one of those old timey ones on the angled metal stand, catalog was like 2 feet thick. Place looked like the last time it was painted was 1957, that industrial green. Absolutely classic. Ring bell. Out comes a guy probably 60 years old in oily coveralls with a perfectly spherical beer belly. All this time I'm thinking "I'm definitely in the right place and this guy has undoubtedly knows every B&S engine made in the last 35 years so I'm gonna be well taken care of." So, I hand him the part, he looks at it, looks at it, looks at it, finally says "I've never seen anything like this." I was so disappointed!!

    • @MultiArrie
      @MultiArrie 5 лет назад

      hahaha, greatstory.

    • @scottfirman
      @scottfirman 5 лет назад

      I saw one of those not too long ago! rare as hens teeth! They didnt make very many. Something about the spring breaking me thinks. Eather way, it wasnt a popular idea.

    • @daverayasr.6287
      @daverayasr.6287 5 лет назад

      pneumatic00 funny story

    • @carllafong7489
      @carllafong7489 5 лет назад

      Was it Oliphant Brothers?

    • @pneumatic00
      @pneumatic00 5 лет назад +2

      @@carllafong7489 That name sounds familiar. (not necessarily related to the lawn mower episode, but this was a mere 30 years ago!) The building was indeed on Saticoy in a cluster of buildings in that kind of industrial area near Raymer, but frankly I couldn't tell you one way or another as to the actual biz name. I never registered the business name. There was the 30 foot long B&S logo painted on the outside of the building and I didn't really give it much thought. I walked in thinking I was in Briggs & Stratton parts heaven a mere 7-8 blocks from my house; but when the guy in the coveralls said he couldn't help me; he wasn't going to be writing a sales invoice with his co name on it... I went from nirvana to stunned disappointment!

  • @MrGaryRoberton
    @MrGaryRoberton 5 лет назад +9

    As my old buddies granddad said, ( WW 2 Vet) try fixing something while you are being shot at, whole new thrills. Speed records galore

  • @dans_Learning_Curve
    @dans_Learning_Curve 5 лет назад +1

    Just watched this one again!
    It never gets old hearing that first fire from an engine!

  • @biggaspirit1
    @biggaspirit1 5 лет назад +1

    Brings back a few memories , love that sound. Thanks as always for your perseverance.

  • @firesafe8417
    @firesafe8417 5 лет назад +11

    Great sounding engine, I do like how they have $5.00 worth of fittings on the exhaust

  • @bernarddier1060
    @bernarddier1060 5 лет назад +9

    I have seen this engine:
    It was on Army surplus a 3kw genset. It had a 3kw Leland alternator.
    It led a long life after the war, until it quit. I got it from a junk pile.
    Being mil spec it has cast shrouds.
    My engine had the lobe on the crank worn so badly that the points would not open sufficiently.
    Being 45 years ago, there were no electronic ignitions available for this engine.

  • @175backtroller
    @175backtroller 2 года назад

    Love seeing old equipment running again.

  • @zacknrudi
    @zacknrudi 4 года назад

    This just made me smile (and giggle a little!), I needed that today.

  • @kevykev8347
    @kevykev8347 5 лет назад +5

    Awesome as always Mustie1, Hands down my favorite channel on the RUclipss. Thanks

    • @kenmurphy2051
      @kenmurphy2051 5 лет назад +2

      Family had an 8hp Briggs on a 1937 Speedex tractor, better than any thing, that size, built today.

  • @darrinsinger4231
    @darrinsinger4231 5 лет назад +5

    Darren, that zz engine has powered a lot of things during the war and it is awesome to see it live once more, one thing you mentioned was due to the altitude you could adjust one of the set screws which is quite true.. They ran IIRC as "putt putt's" or APU's (aircraft power units) all the way down to running a mobile kitchen dishwasher (watch the "Flying Leathernecks" with John Wayne) and you may very well see that same engine being used to pump fuel into the aircraft that they were flying F4U Corsair's IIRC. It's good to see it running once more, great save on that engine because it has been a work horse throughout it's life

  • @haroldholt8682
    @haroldholt8682 3 года назад +1

    Love watching your videos, they got me thru quarantining in Florida, and, taught me a few things. Thanks!!

  • @peterneumann5467
    @peterneumann5467 5 лет назад

    Thanks for another fun project to watch.

  • @Brandon-ch2ot
    @Brandon-ch2ot 5 лет назад +46

    I'm a simple man. I see a will it run mustie1 video and I hit like then I watch

  • @TheCowgirlNiamh
    @TheCowgirlNiamh 5 лет назад +12

    Love the sound! I envision it on an old style military bike. Blue paint? Where?!! 🤔😂

  • @SAPETERSONERIC
    @SAPETERSONERIC 5 лет назад

    Love your videos They are very appreciated. Always learn a lot. Thanks

  • @daveg1208
    @daveg1208 5 лет назад

    Love those old engines, have a few myself. Thank you for sharing.

  • @johnkoelliker4381
    @johnkoelliker4381 5 лет назад +9

    Cool engine, definitely should be made into something

  • @neiloconnell2120
    @neiloconnell2120 5 лет назад +6

    Wonderful deductive reasoning when identifying the issues. Thank you, Darren :)

  • @russellpettitt8931
    @russellpettitt8931 3 года назад

    great video, as always. enjoy your curiosity, methodical approach, and seeing the fun you have!

  • @jeffreystaley5266
    @jeffreystaley5266 5 лет назад +2

    That was fun. I find your videos playful, relaxing and informative.

  • @haywire17
    @haywire17 5 лет назад +4

    Amazing in 1943 we had the technology to manufacture a high voltage coil with insulation and windings that lasted over 75 years. Also love the sediment bowl. Best water / dirt separator ever engineered.

  • @piratepete-thetruthisforevery1
    @piratepete-thetruthisforevery1 5 лет назад +6

    Will it run? Of course it will! , after you tinker with it.
    I don't think I've EVER seen a "Will it Run" video that didn't...
    Mustie1 is #1 at repairing ANYTHING mechanical! :)

  • @jerryc3050
    @jerryc3050 4 года назад +1

    Didn't think I was going to like that video, but it's over and I never missed a second.

  • @stevenjohannesen88
    @stevenjohannesen88 4 года назад

    Electrical knowledge required for all we have seen today, great video for us novices!

  • @jackjacke4654
    @jackjacke4654 5 лет назад +4

    Rock on Mustie 1 always my favorite videos...

  • @MrKubbler
    @MrKubbler 5 лет назад +3

    Thanks for your content, I enjoy all of it.

  • @josephhead8345
    @josephhead8345 2 года назад

    Love all your videos. Learn so much. Thank you.

  • @jamesbutler1862
    @jamesbutler1862 5 лет назад

    Pure talent right there. Love your show.

  • @Thebowzer221
    @Thebowzer221 5 лет назад +4

    I'm watching a master at his craft. You film from start to finish regardless of the outcome, and usually something is now running!
    Keep them coming. I really enjoy your channel!
    Mike M.

  • @AZVIDS
    @AZVIDS 4 года назад

    Once again, nice job and fun learning experience watching your vids!

  • @5150Lane
    @5150Lane 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome old engine! Love seeing them come back to life.

  • @steveratliff40
    @steveratliff40 5 лет назад +4

    Great job sir

  • @sirjeepsalot94
    @sirjeepsalot94 5 лет назад +3

    Long time watcher first time comment. I appreciate your videos and keep up the great work. I rebuilt my first carb last weekend and your vids made the job so easy. It's like, I knew what I was doing before I started. Thanks

  • @davidrobertson3904
    @davidrobertson3904 4 года назад

    I always enjoy and learn a lot from your videos

  • @medictom1
    @medictom1 4 года назад

    Love the old Briggs engine...A good lesson in step by step troubleshooting. At idle it sounds like Chitty Chitty Bang Bang...Neat old trailer too, but I have a trailer problem too. Always a good view, Thanks.

  • @Bigjoedo66
    @Bigjoedo66 5 лет назад +3

    B&S ZZ are beasts. Nice job bringing it back to life

  • @123cheetacat123
    @123cheetacat123 5 лет назад +8

    I have found with the older engines, They need to spin up a bit befor they spark enough to fire off !
    Gewd job, sound like a old motor cycle.
    The trailer has a tiny bit of blue paint here and there XD !

    • @throttlebottle5906
      @throttlebottle5906 5 лет назад +2

      magnets get weak, and the coil gap magically gets wide, if points an condenser, points need cleaned/adjusted and condenser getting weak causes that too

  • @norman5105
    @norman5105 5 лет назад

    could watch this stuff all day. Great detailed commentary.

  • @awesomeguy8392
    @awesomeguy8392 5 лет назад

    Love that little motor! Sound real good!!

  • @Marcywm42
    @Marcywm42 5 лет назад +3

    This is as cool as it gets. I had a 1950’s Cushman motor scooter with a very similar engine. Great cause and effect problem solving. Thank you.