Petrol lawn mower - two or four stroke?

Petrol lawn mower - two or four stroke?

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Discussion

B3Svert

Original Poster:

553 posts

193 months

Tuesday 7th April 2009
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Having moved into my house late last year, I only had to cut the lawn once before winter and the time has come (ok it's quite overdue now) to do it again. I used the lawn mower that I found in the garage left by the previous owner which had just enough petrol in it to do the job but now I need some more. Mower is quite an old looking Honda, is there a way of telling if it's two or four stroke? I don't want to damage it by putting oil in the mix if there's no need.

It's a Honda Easy Start HR194, done a google search and the Honda site states their current models are all 4-stroke but mine looks around 10 years older than them.

Is there a way to tell other than trial and error?

mrmaggit

10,146 posts

249 months

Tuesday 7th April 2009
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If it's two-stroke, there'll either be a separate oil tank, or some form of suggested petrol/oil mix marked on the petrol tank cap, or just by the filler.

Some have a cup moulded into the underside of the filler cap for the two-stroke oil.

B3Svert

Original Poster:

553 posts

193 months

Tuesday 7th April 2009
quotequote all
Thanks for that, there is a seperate oil tank so does that mean I do not have to do the mix myself? Assume it's mixed at the proper ratio by the mower itself in that case.
I guess I need some two-stroke oil, can I use normal 95 unleaded with it?
Sorry for all the dumb questions, first garden I've ever owned and want to make it as nice as possible biggrin

SwanJack

1,912 posts

273 months

Tuesday 7th April 2009
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If you have a separate oil tank, then you have a 4 stroke. Put lawnmower motor oil in there, B&Q sell it, NOT 2 stroke oil. Put only petrol in the petrol tank. I have a Honda and the filler to the oil tank has a dipstick on it. 2 stroke engines require oil and petrol to be mixed before you fill the petrol tank. I worked as a groundsman for a while and did not come across a 2 stroke with a separate oil tank that did the mixing itself.

Edited by SwanJack on Tuesday 7th April 11:36

tr7v8

7,199 posts

229 months

Tuesday 7th April 2009
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I used to sell mowers a few years ago & I'm 99.9% sure that Honda have never made 2 stroke mowers.
Got a model number of the mower or motor.

Johnnytheboy

24,498 posts

187 months

Tuesday 7th April 2009
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I've only ever encountered 2-stroke HOVER mowers (eg Flymos), never rotaries.

2-stroke is useful for cutting steep banks, as are hover mowers, otherwise 4-stroke is ideal.

Lanby

1,106 posts

215 months

Wednesday 8th April 2009
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SwanJack said:
If you have a separate oil tank, then you have a 4 stroke. Put lawnmower motor oil in there, B&Q sell it, NOT 2 stroke oil. Put only petrol in the petrol tank. I have a Honda and the filler to the oil tank has a dipstick on it. 2 stroke engines require oil and petrol to be mixed before you fill the petrol tank. I worked as a groundsman for a while and did not come across a 2 stroke with a separate oil tank that did the mixing itself.
Good advice, I know I supply B&Q their oil!

joewilliams

2,004 posts

202 months

Wednesday 8th April 2009
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Johnnytheboy said:
I've only ever encountered 2-stroke HOVER mowers (eg Flymos), never rotaries.

2-stroke is useful for cutting steep banks, as are hover mowers, otherwise 4-stroke is ideal.
We have a two-stroke Mountfield rotary. Suzuki engine I believe.

As above, if it has a seperate oil tank (probably with a dipstick), it's a 4 stroke. 2 strokes normally have a marking near the fuel tank indicating the correct mix, but a sticker could have come off.

As a sanity check, you could disconnect the spark plug and turn it over, feeling for the compression strokes.