Batpig
26th February 2009, 09:59 PM
Dear Folks,
The short way of asking my question is: Has anyone got a late model Briggs & Stratton-powered Mower, with the non-adjustable type of Carburettor, and your Spark Plug is burning the correct and healthy Light Tan colour (rather than the unhealthy Black)?. If yes (ie. your Plug's burning Light Tan), what is the Brand and Model No. of your Spark Plug?..
The long way of asking the same question is as follows: The Champion RJ19LM is the factory fitted Spark Plug on most Briggs & Stratton Lawnmower engines. Mine is burning black, and since the mower is still newish and chock-full of compression, and since I've given the Carby a good clean and tested the Float, the problem has got to be either an excessively-rich Air-Fuel Mixture (which I can't do anything about, since the Carby is all "preset" and non-adjustable), or a Spark Plug that isn't "hot" enough...
So...:cool: Do any of you perhaps know of another Plug (of any brand) that is physically equivalent to the RJ19LM (which has a 14mm Thread, 9.5mm Reach, 20.6mm Hex, and a Gasket-type Seat), but with a Heat Range slightly hotter than the Champion's 19 out of their own 25-stage Heat Scale?
Just by the by, the "R" at the start of the Model Designation stands for "Resistor" (but I don't think it would make much of a difference whether or not the Plug had one...), and the "LM" at the end refers to it being a special LawnMower Plug (but I can't see much difference between it and the end of one of the Plugs out of my car...). The "19" in the middle of the designation refers to its Heat Range...
Unfortunately, there's no such Plug by Champion as an RJ20LM...:-.
NGK do an equivalent (the BR2-LM), as do Bosch (the WR11EO), but if they both just have only about the same Heat Range as the Champion, then I'll probably just end up with another Plug that ends up black again, from not burning hot enough...
Complicating the whole question is the fact that the different Plug manufacturers all use different Heat Scales. Some have more stages in their Scales than others, and some Scales go up numerically with increasing heat, while others come down...:(
Any takers, oh Small Engine and/or Spark Plug Aficianados?...
Many Thanks,
Batpig.
The short way of asking my question is: Has anyone got a late model Briggs & Stratton-powered Mower, with the non-adjustable type of Carburettor, and your Spark Plug is burning the correct and healthy Light Tan colour (rather than the unhealthy Black)?. If yes (ie. your Plug's burning Light Tan), what is the Brand and Model No. of your Spark Plug?..
The long way of asking the same question is as follows: The Champion RJ19LM is the factory fitted Spark Plug on most Briggs & Stratton Lawnmower engines. Mine is burning black, and since the mower is still newish and chock-full of compression, and since I've given the Carby a good clean and tested the Float, the problem has got to be either an excessively-rich Air-Fuel Mixture (which I can't do anything about, since the Carby is all "preset" and non-adjustable), or a Spark Plug that isn't "hot" enough...
So...:cool: Do any of you perhaps know of another Plug (of any brand) that is physically equivalent to the RJ19LM (which has a 14mm Thread, 9.5mm Reach, 20.6mm Hex, and a Gasket-type Seat), but with a Heat Range slightly hotter than the Champion's 19 out of their own 25-stage Heat Scale?
Just by the by, the "R" at the start of the Model Designation stands for "Resistor" (but I don't think it would make much of a difference whether or not the Plug had one...), and the "LM" at the end refers to it being a special LawnMower Plug (but I can't see much difference between it and the end of one of the Plugs out of my car...). The "19" in the middle of the designation refers to its Heat Range...
Unfortunately, there's no such Plug by Champion as an RJ20LM...:-.
NGK do an equivalent (the BR2-LM), as do Bosch (the WR11EO), but if they both just have only about the same Heat Range as the Champion, then I'll probably just end up with another Plug that ends up black again, from not burning hot enough...
Complicating the whole question is the fact that the different Plug manufacturers all use different Heat Scales. Some have more stages in their Scales than others, and some Scales go up numerically with increasing heat, while others come down...:(
Any takers, oh Small Engine and/or Spark Plug Aficianados?...
Many Thanks,
Batpig.