Thank you for the video. Prior to watching your video I changed the oil on my tiller. Unfortunately l over filled the oil. I had to drain the new oil out and remove the spark plug and let oil drain out of the cylinder. Then I filled the oil just like you showed on the video. It took a while to get the tiller started because of the residual oil in cylinder. But once I got it started I able finishing my raised beds.
SAE 30 is typically used for smaller engines. But the 10w-30 would do just as fine! The SAE30 is better for warmer temperatures while the 10W30 is suitable for varying temperature ranges and also works well in cold weather. The trick here is to make sure you change the oil frequently and to flip the tiller forward, so you can reassure that it's the proper level of oil. Also, once oil is changed, wait a few minutes so oil can find its way - since the machine has been tilted forward. That way you can avoid seeing gray/oil burned smoke!
As the short video shows, use 10W30, synthetic preferably because it tends to be slicker than the non-synthetic, however the important thing is that the oil be changed frequently before it gets too dirty.
Thank you for the video. Prior to watching your video I changed the oil on my tiller. Unfortunately l over filled the oil. I had to drain the new oil out and remove the spark plug and let oil drain out of the cylinder.
Then I filled the oil just like you showed on the video.
It took a while to get the tiller started because of the residual oil in cylinder.
But once I got it started I able finishing my raised beds.
Wow! The oil you changed out was so clean!
SAE 30 is typically used for smaller engines. But the 10w-30 would do just as fine! The SAE30 is better for warmer temperatures while the 10W30 is suitable for varying temperature ranges and also works well in cold weather. The trick here is to make sure you change the oil frequently and to flip the tiller forward, so you can reassure that it's the proper level of oil. Also, once oil is changed, wait a few minutes so oil can find its way - since the machine has been tilted forward. That way you can avoid seeing gray/oil burned smoke!
well there was a lot less to that than I thought there would be!
Must use motorcycle (4T) oil, not car oil?
As the short video shows, use 10W30, synthetic preferably because it tends to be slicker than the non-synthetic, however the important thing is that the oil be changed frequently before it gets too dirty.
LOL funny video ty.
That was easy!
Honda gx25 total reeprr