1966 Briggs and Stratton - Original Wind up starter - First start

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  • čas přidán 21. 10. 2013
  • Bought this mower a while back and just didn't get chance to work on it at the time. But with an hours work it was up and running. The wind up starter is great!
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 521

  • @CraftsmanontheLake
    @CraftsmanontheLake Před 5 lety +35

    We had one when I was a kid...Sears. After awhile the wind up spring went. We welded a large nut onto the shaft and started it with a large 1/2" electric drill with a socket in the spindle. It worked good but you needed to know when to pull it off after the engine engaged.

    • @deborahchesser7375
      @deborahchesser7375 Před 3 lety +2

      Or the drill went for a ride lol. We had a big Milwaukee hole shooter like your talking about, with the pipe on the other side to hold onto it. My Dad got one bound up putting railing on the porch, it spun him around, hog tied him with the cord and he fell in the bushes, I’ll never forget that 😂

    • @patrickflohe7427
      @patrickflohe7427 Před 10 dny

      BAHAHAHA
      I bet you did have to pull it off at the right time!

  • @garyalensr
    @garyalensr Před 5 lety +7

    This is by far the coolest lawn mower ever!!! Companys definitely don't make then like this anymore. The sad part is they make them so cheap that when they break down after the first season they hope you just buy a new one. Thank God there's a thousand vids on CZcams showing how to fix them. Really cool video, thanks for sharing

  • @cottoncox1435
    @cottoncox1435 Před 5 lety +21

    My Dad had one back in the 1960's
    I wish they still made them that way.
    You're lucky to have one.

  • @davidclark8286
    @davidclark8286 Před 5 lety +59

    That’s when Briggs & Stratton made a great engine.

    • @jack-dh9hs
      @jack-dh9hs Před 5 lety +2

      David Clark are they not still great?

    • @TFD1982
      @TFD1982 Před 5 lety

      jack definitely not I see so manny returned every week it’s crazy and from what it seems to be most of them have no compression

    • @dylanclay2741
      @dylanclay2741 Před 5 lety +1

      @@TFD1982 that's from usually sticking intake valve or running it out of oil , see it all the time

    • @bcubed72
      @bcubed72 Před 4 lety +2

      @@jack-dh9hs
      I really like their flatties; OHV, not so much.
      The basic design was the same from the 1950s, but towards the millennium they started "decontenting" with a vengeance (omitting the drain plug, for instance). Also the plastic carb on the smaller flattie is a joke, but a fairly cheap joke to replace if it comes to that.
      Of course, the EPA won't let us have flatheads anymore...

    • @doct0rnic
      @doct0rnic Před 4 lety

      @@bcubed72 flat head is the least efficient, the briggs flat head was rough inside kind of surprised they run so well with so much impeding the air fuel mixter, even so there's a reason why everyone including car companies got away from the flat head

  • @jamessommer6077
    @jamessommer6077 Před 5 lety +14

    Very interesting as my grandfather still has a mid-1960's crank style mower such as this one and also a 3.50hp Briggs engine,he calls it the "Monster" his is a gold color and still works 50+ years later.

  • @mercoid
    @mercoid Před 5 lety +9

    My father bought one of these new in the late 60’s when I was 3 or 4 years old. I was still mowing the lawn with it well into the late 80’s. And it was purple and called Mustang!

  • @703am
    @703am Před 8 lety +18

    I'm in my 60's now and remember using one of these as a kid thanks for posting , brings back some memories

  • @justincase3320
    @justincase3320 Před 5 lety +19

    My dad had one in the early 70s. The crank or winder would kick back and he would cuss like hell.

  • @appalachianamerican7171
    @appalachianamerican7171 Před 5 lety +84

    Love the wind up deal. Better than pulling your arm off. Seems like we are going backwards.

    • @bcubed72
      @bcubed72 Před 5 lety +22

      Gee, it seems to me the exact opposite.
      In the amount of time it took him to wind it up and release, I could have pulled the cord 3-4 times. And with more force, too.
      This seems more geared for invalids, small children, and petite women.

    • @EpicConspiracy
      @EpicConspiracy Před 5 lety +4

      i never have pulled a cord more than once last 10 years

    • @dailystruggle2762
      @dailystruggle2762 Před 5 lety

      Same engines as todays ones...

    • @LakeLeePrism
      @LakeLeePrism Před 5 lety

      STA-BIL

    • @billydarley6925
      @billydarley6925 Před 5 lety

      @Daver G i love honda products but i hate todays fuels. they suck. and in WA forget finding high octane, 92-93 is about as good as it gets.

  • @user-hc8lg7fs7m
    @user-hc8lg7fs7m Před rokem +38

    The assembly of the lawn mower could be done without any problems czcams.com/users/postUgkxTPN04aT-Qdjr_KS3ql7ng8wnU3wwsCqk also recommend I just puzzled something about the red strange “key”. However, it quickly turned out that this creates a kind of contact bridge between battery packs and lawn mowers. An additional backup as a father of a 1 year old nephew is great!! :-)

  • @Rog1550
    @Rog1550 Před 6 lety +142

    I know I'm getting old if I still remember wind up mowers.

  • @wind-solar
    @wind-solar Před 5 lety +90

    My dad bought a new mower from Montgomery Wards in 1970. It had the wind up starter and the fluid nozzle on the muffler for mosquito fog. How am I still alive?😆

    • @4gauge10
      @4gauge10 Před 5 lety +4

      @Charles Williams Nope,if you Google"Montgomery Wards"or type in www.montgomery wards.com,you'll see this store STILL exists.
      They STILL HAVE a Montgomery 💳⬅credit that you can use,or pay cash from your bank account.

    • @MrSammythebull25
      @MrSammythebull25 Před 5 lety +1

      Ha Ha..That's funny brother...

    • @billlowe6883
      @billlowe6883 Před 5 lety

      Appearance of his foot under the mower deck while cranking adds a nice touch. 👍

    • @lukebecker1959
      @lukebecker1959 Před 5 lety

      @@drewshubeck3000 im not a wimp

  • @Foxonian
    @Foxonian Před 5 lety +8

    My dad had a wind up mower like this that he fixed up after finding it in the dump in the late 70's. We used it for years until the block failed.

  • @josephsfields
    @josephsfields Před 7 lety +46

    I pushed one of these in 1970 at age 8. I remember like a kid that I thought it would be the most fun ever. The yard was 2.5 acres so the fun part was over pretty quick. It was not long before my folks had to threaten the lash to get me motivated. The end of the story is that 2.5 acres killed that old thing. My pops brought home a brand new Sears self propelled mower. 2.5 acres killed that one too in about another year or two. See, the thing is, my old man is the least mechanical guy on Earth. I still laugh when I think back at how that blade never got sharpened, ever and changing the oil was an idea my mom came up with. She was the type to read an owners manual on that new expensive Sears mower that came home in her red Ford LTD stationwagon with the simulated wood paneling on the side.

    • @geoffreyjones2000
      @geoffreyjones2000 Před 6 lety +1

      Wow...my childhood. :)

    • @blessed7fold
      @blessed7fold Před 5 lety +1

      Joseph Fields LMAO 😂😂😂

    • @Quanter44
      @Quanter44 Před 5 lety +1

      Joe, You just wrote my childhood to a tee! No kidding. You are my same age. Dad had a new Ford (Country Squire.) station wagon every 2 years when I was growing up. We had that old hand crank B&S mower with a knob on it to start it after winding. Motor was white and deck was green.

    • @ianwinfield929
      @ianwinfield929 Před 5 lety +1

      I could visualize your whole trip down memory lane

    • @horsepower0539
      @horsepower0539 Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah I know now if you have a kid do that he think you're killing him we all did are work at that time

  • @mattbayes1871
    @mattbayes1871 Před rokem +1

    This brings back memories of my childhood and the mower that my father had. Thanks for sharing!

  • @stevenhimmelreich4737
    @stevenhimmelreich4737 Před 5 lety +3

    I was given a 1966 Turfmaster that has a 3.5hp Briggs and Stratton. It has a pull cord to start, but I'm pretty sure it orginally had a wind up. It runs great and I've been using it for many years. The deck is machined aluminum also. It is a very reliable engine. Never gives me any starting issues. Great machine, made in USA.

  • @RANDALLOLOGY
    @RANDALLOLOGY Před 5 lety +12

    OMG that crank mower brings back memories. Had one and hated it for being hard to start.
    That was before I learned bout engines and that wonderful can called starting fluid. Lol

    • @3713msg
      @3713msg Před 5 lety +1

      We had one of those too. The spring broke, and my father fitted a rope start recoil to it instead. It sure was easier to start, after that.

  • @martinbenton742
    @martinbenton742 Před 5 lety +8

    My grandparents had a Craftsman mower with that crank starter. It lasted for years. It beat the hell out of yanking a dam rope. This is the only other one I've seen.
    MB BAR RANCH

  • @centralcoastcamper9631
    @centralcoastcamper9631 Před 5 lety +5

    I haven't seen a wind up start mower since the 1970's. Brings back memories.

    • @blacksheep9734
      @blacksheep9734 Před 5 lety

      CentralCoastCamper good ones? Ir just cranking and cranking and cranking

  • @rebus9
    @rebus9 Před 5 lety +11

    Thanks for the look back!! My family had one of these wind-ups when I was a kid, and I spent a lot of hours mowing with it.

  • @MikeAndNary
    @MikeAndNary Před 5 lety +3

    We had one of those back in the 70's. I remember my dad took off the crank and used an electric drill to start it.

  • @TheAussieStig30
    @TheAussieStig30 Před 7 lety +1

    I have a 70's 2 stroke 139cc Victa with a crank handle like that. To me, that brings back my first memories of lawnmowers and when I decided to collect or restore, maybe hoard them, I had to have one. Mine needs a carburetor but I'm positive it will run. I've got spark and compression so it should run. I remember back in the early 80's mowing the lawn didn't always happen, because our Victa Cortina wouldn't always start, until later when Nan bought a Scott Bonnar with a Briggs pull start motor. We had that mower over 20 years and was running when I sold it to a friend. I now own a current key start 2 stroke Victa, plus a new electric mower, but once my wind up mower is running, that will be my main mower.

  • @georgeharleydavidsonrider156

    Thanks for the memories

  • @patrickflohe7427
    @patrickflohe7427 Před 10 dny

    That’s so cool!
    I do have a vague memory of these….I turned 1 year old, the year this was made.

  • @ricktempleton3415
    @ricktempleton3415 Před 4 lety +1

    We had one of these mowers. It was nice to go down memory lane.

  • @dam4274
    @dam4274 Před 5 lety +6

    My Dad had bought an Ariens in 1968 with a great Tecumseh motor. His Dad bought a Jacobsen in 1970 with a windup Briggs on it. I liked the windup but the damn Briggs was always hard to start.

  • @Qingeaton
    @Qingeaton Před 3 lety

    Thanks for putting this up. Probably very few working examples anymore.

  • @RFKFANTS67
    @RFKFANTS67 Před 8 lety +2

    Thanks for sharing this. I had a few in the early 80's as a kid. You should rebuild and keep that ole girl..

  • @sambaritone
    @sambaritone Před 5 lety +1

    I had one of these engines on a Sears Craftsman mower back in the 70s. Loved it, and the fact that the wind up starter was so unique.

  • @jerrymaulden9805
    @jerrymaulden9805 Před 8 lety +5

    Never seen the deck before but as a kid I had one of the hand cranks...I was born in 57... So I was 9 yrs old mowing lawns for money when this one was brand new...Now what your supposed to do is... tear down the carb and run a wire through all the holes, they kinda lacquer up after a little sitting and the fuel evaporates. Then soak the sponge air cleaner in oil and really squeeze it out, squirt a shot of fuel down the carb... You oil the sponge you don't have to use the choke... set throttle 1/4th way off dead stop. Now pull till ya gets a blister... Good good good, Now! take the air breather off and take a 8 oz. pop bottle of water and hold your thumb on the top and let the engine rev a bout half way.. Now let it sip some water, keep revving the engine, don't let it die. This will clean off the valves. maybe it might quit smoking. Maybe your wife will let you go buy a new one...

  • @gevowavemagnet
    @gevowavemagnet Před 5 lety +4

    My dad had one of those. He finally was able to afford a Lawn Boy self propelled and never looked back at B&S again.

  • @JS-kd7jf
    @JS-kd7jf Před rokem

    I wish that type starter would make a comeback! I like that, I think it's a good idea!!

  • @edwardcalvert
    @edwardcalvert Před 5 lety +5

    I recall seeing a lawnmower with a Briggs and Stratton engine that had that kind of manual wind up starter back when I was in Kindergarten which was in fall of 1974-1975 school year.

  • @drewb9034
    @drewb9034 Před 2 lety

    Good lord! My dad had a Masport Rotacut with a wind up starter engine back in the 60s like that! It had the knob to lock the engine further forward than your one plus it had an oil bath air cleaner. Otherwise it was the same as your one. I haven't seen another wind up B&S since the early 80s until your video today. They were bit of beast of an engine alright, and yep, they had "their moments!"

  • @Captleemo
    @Captleemo Před 5 lety +3

    I remember those wind up starters. My first lawnmower was a used Yardman that had a cast aluminum or cast magnesium deck. It also had a big pedal that looked like a brake pedal but it was a blade clutch. Real handy to have if you were starting your mower in deep grass. It also had a 3,5 HP B&S engine but it was pull start.

  • @bobbyfranklin3734
    @bobbyfranklin3734 Před 5 lety

    Gosh. I remember when I was young. Working on these old lawn mowers. Having to use them to mower yard. I haven't seen a wind up mower and over 40 years. And I'm a retired mechanic. I spent many years at a 2 cycle 4 cycle lawn mower shop this is the first one I've seen since the late 60s early 70s. They were awesome.

  • @ryanmcgouirk9402
    @ryanmcgouirk9402 Před 5 lety

    Briggs and Stratton here happy to see you have a motor like that

  • @douglasdailey5998
    @douglasdailey5998 Před 5 lety

    A nice piece of history.

  • @crossvilleboy
    @crossvilleboy Před 6 měsíci

    I just bought a Biltmore Crank push mower. 3.5 hp. Starts and runs. $25. Very happy.

  • @tomjones4318
    @tomjones4318 Před 5 lety +8

    Haven't heard that in fifty years. Totally forgot about that whacky method.

    • @tomjones4318
      @tomjones4318 Před 5 lety

      @socal rocks I remember the kid next door cranking on one of these over and over. I've been running B&S on Toros now ten years and never had any real trouble. I do wish it were easier to hit correct fluid levels though.

  • @TralfazConstruction
    @TralfazConstruction Před 5 lety +1

    Reminds me of The Flight of the Phoenix (1965) engine start sequence. When my younger brother and I would work on any internal combustion engine it was obligatory for one of us to say that we were going to 'use one cartridge, ignition-off, to clean out the cylinders'.

  • @covinomartinez6048
    @covinomartinez6048 Před 8 lety

    Thanks for posting "MO3MINI"! I love anything '60's and you lawn mower Kick some Butt! Ciao....

  • @6548ww
    @6548ww Před 5 lety +3

    I love these older mowers especially the ones that had the front side discharge don’t see them anymore.

    • @horsepower0539
      @horsepower0539 Před 5 lety +1

      I have an old Atlas push mower like that I bought from Western Auto I still use it to this day the tires wore out I had to put new tires on it

  • @mariozermeno2649
    @mariozermeno2649 Před 5 lety +1

    Wow I never seen one like that before and believe me i seen my share of old mowers because that's how my dad taught me how to fix gas engines he would buy them at the swapmeet not running and I would take them apart and get them running wich later turned into working on cars . Thanks for sharing

  • @MrUbiquitousTech
    @MrUbiquitousTech Před 5 lety +1

    That's a cool little mower. I've seen the wind up starters, but never had my hands on one. If I ever do it's going to be a keeper.

  • @russbilzing5348
    @russbilzing5348 Před rokem

    I made plenty of money with one of these back then (when money actually had much more value than now), doing as many of the front and back yards in the neighborhoods I lived in. Of course, anything I did at home was free for my parents, as it was their equipment. It taught me to do regular maintenance and the art of doing the best work I could so I would get the best results without wearing myself out, or the mower. You could count on wearing out the spring every year or two, depending, but that wasn't much work.

  • @randymagnum143
    @randymagnum143 Před 4 lety

    There was one of these engines layingnon the ground at an auction last summer. No one knew what it was. I cranked it up, which was rather difficult as it had no mower to steady it. I held on with my left hand, cranked with my right. Hit it.......had my hand on the spark plug wire. Son-ofa-gun......got me a half dozen times before i knew what was happening.

  • @42lookc
    @42lookc Před 5 lety +1

    That is really cool. I am almost certain I saw a lawn mower with that starter on it a long, long time ago. Same color, too.

  • @davidhorsley1149
    @davidhorsley1149 Před 5 lety +2

    Funny how you forget something until you see it again. When I was young (very young), we had several of these mowers, circa late 60's.

  • @garylangley4502
    @garylangley4502 Před 5 lety +1

    My mom bought a new Montgomery Ward lawn mower with a 3.5 hp Briggs and Stratton motor that had an "impact" starter just like that one in 1966. The deck was just a regular side discharge plain-jane one. It was all painted gold. The spring in the starter broke in the '70's, so someone found a regular recoil rope starter on a junker mower and put that on. Someone stole it in the '80's, but still running.

  • @enginesandoutdoors3238
    @enginesandoutdoors3238 Před 5 lety +2

    That wind up is pretty neat. I’ve always used older lawn boy 2 strokes. They are pretty good and very low maintenance. The coil needs replacing every now and then on some of mine but overall they are great. My dad has 23.

    • @gregoryclemen1870
      @gregoryclemen1870 Před 7 měsíci

      you would be amazed, who developed the lawn boy 2 cycle engines( c/d mod.) none other than "STEVE BRIGGS", who started the outboard marine corporation with ALLIE EVENRUDE. steve briggs left briggs& stratton corporation in 1948 to start up "O.M.C."

  • @100PercentOS2
    @100PercentOS2 Před 5 lety +4

    I'm 20 years older than your mower. But I didn't remember what they look like that long ago. However I sure remember those mufflers.

  • @wildwelder87
    @wildwelder87 Před 3 lety

    Very cool! I found a mower similar to that on an abandoned property that I was helping clean up today. It's all there and I think it will run with a little work.

  • @robertthomas5906
    @robertthomas5906 Před 5 lety +2

    My Dad had a Montgomery Wards mower like that. 20". The wind up I can still hear in my head to this day. I think the whole neighborhood could hear that sucker. A lot different than this one. The main spring broke back in the late 1970s and by then you could still get one if you were lucky. Some mower shops had them in stock. Briggs stopped making them. I couldn't locate one. Wouldn't be surprised if one is on ebay. I switched the top and kept it going until 2008 or 42 years. At that point the deck was rusting out, fixture to hold the blade was rusting out and the motor had had it. Still ran though.

  • @clawhammer704
    @clawhammer704 Před 5 lety +1

    We had a wind up mower. I liked them a lot.

  • @VintageOutboardMan
    @VintageOutboardMan Před 10 lety

    That's a really awsome starter man, wish I could find one like that!

  • @larrykeesee1442
    @larrykeesee1442 Před 6 lety

    The deck looks so well made..A collectors item for sure..I remember those days..Retired Indianapolis indiana..

  • @anthonycassata5152
    @anthonycassata5152 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Proves that when something is made in the USA, it will last!!!👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @ssnoc
    @ssnoc Před 5 lety

    My dad had that exact mower .... I remember him cranking it up .... very cool.

  • @ronyerke9250
    @ronyerke9250 Před 6 lety +1

    I remember when those mowers were new. It was a lot of fun to wind it up for a kid in single digits of age. Plus, nobody had to remember where the pull cord had been left. The mower we had before the wind-up start had a pull cord that was not attached, and a fully exposed pulley. Put the knot in the slot, win it up and pull. Repeat, repeat, repeat...

    • @sentradynamics8889
      @sentradynamics8889 Před 6 lety

      Ron Yerke my grandpa has a wood splitter with an old Wisconsin engine on it.. same thing with the rope and the pulley.. the thing will yank your dang arm off it it kicks back though. Good times

    • @ronyerke9250
      @ronyerke9250 Před 6 lety

      I remember my grandfather getting the handle yanked out of his hand when starting a little boat motor. He got whacked on the other arm. I'm pretty sure it hurt from the look on his face. It makes me shudder. I like the newer stuff better, but those old things DID work. I really get interested in how things work and innovations.

  • @fourfortyroadrunner6701
    @fourfortyroadrunner6701 Před 5 lety +4

    My Gramps had one about 1960? ish, I was around 12. Hated it. Damn thing never started easy, even when warm. Seemed like starter just didn't have "enough."

  • @goodcitizen
    @goodcitizen Před 5 lety

    I remember these. Thanks for sharing.

  • @mattgrooms3298
    @mattgrooms3298 Před 9 lety +2

    I like that starting system.

    • @MrTheHillfolk
      @MrTheHillfolk Před 8 lety +3

      I remember coming across 1 or 2 while growing up in the late 80s...it's something they should reintroduce.

    • @mattgrooms3298
      @mattgrooms3298 Před 8 lety

      +MrTheHillfolk I agree

  • @paddyotable
    @paddyotable Před 5 lety +5

    I remember the wind up starter being a big deal when they first came out. :)

  • @GlueTubber
    @GlueTubber Před 5 lety

    I had one of these! It was awesome!

  • @rm25088
    @rm25088 Před 8 lety

    Wow that is pretty cool. I have never seen something like this before.

  • @railrider4745
    @railrider4745 Před 5 lety +1

    oh the memories!! Dad had a 5hp on his little sears handle bar steering rider from sears... had solid hard tires on rims.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 Před 5 lety

    My dad bought one of these mowers with the briggs and stratton wind up starter in 1960. I used to mow the lawn with it when I was a kid. You're right, when they got older, the little metal post to which the spring attatched broke off, and the spring would work as long as it got wedged, but sping tension would cause it to slip making one heck of a noise. We replaced the spring starter with a rope pull type, but it usually couldn't rotate the engine fast enough to start it.

  • @Krankie_V
    @Krankie_V Před 9 lety

    I've got one just like it, runs great. starts on the second try after sitting weeks

  • @ivaninskeep7892
    @ivaninskeep7892 Před 5 lety +1

    I remember those kind of lawn mowers awesome

  • @theunknownandunsolved6963

    Holy shit my father used to have one of these when i was a kid...now im in my 30s and i love my brigs and strats..damn wish i had that mower now :/

  • @tomrizzo1554
    @tomrizzo1554 Před 5 lety

    How awesome I remember those crank starts wish I had one

  • @TheJohndeere212
    @TheJohndeere212 Před 5 lety +2

    I used to have some of those mowers back then. I still have one old Briggs. 1949 Briggs and Stratton Model 14

    • @frank1015
      @frank1015 Před 5 lety +1

      Can you make a video of it

    • @TheJohndeere212
      @TheJohndeere212 Před 5 lety

      I will try

    • @frank1015
      @frank1015 Před 5 lety +1

      @@TheJohndeere212 sweet because you dont see many from that era because of ww2

  • @jaydean8843
    @jaydean8843 Před 6 lety +18

    My grandmother had one of these in the 70s
    I mowed her yard for 5 DOLLARS.

  • @oldoldpilgrim7898
    @oldoldpilgrim7898 Před 5 lety +2

    My grandfather had a windup. When the spring broke and he replaced the windup with a rewind rope starter, nobody cried.

  • @dphotos007
    @dphotos007 Před 6 lety

    My parents had the same lawnmower engine start as this mower in the late 60’s. I used to ride up and down the street behind with my skateboard. The mower had a direct drive to the rear wheels.

  • @frankbaublit
    @frankbaublit Před 5 lety

    That brought back the good ole days

  • @operator8014
    @operator8014 Před 5 lety +2

    Oh gosh! I've seen one of those before, but I had no idea how it worked. I never thought to unfold it like that.

  • @retiredammo4617
    @retiredammo4617 Před 5 lety

    My Grandfather had the same type of engine on his mower. This thing would wear your arm out trying to start it!

  • @larrysnyder3475
    @larrysnyder3475 Před 5 lety

    Very cool. Thanks for sharing.

  • @keystonedaytrip238
    @keystonedaytrip238 Před 5 lety

    Wow , I haven't seen a wind-up Briggs in forever . We had one when I was a kid

  • @terremoto..6809
    @terremoto..6809 Před 5 lety

    What a 💎 you have!

  • @chasgantz3059
    @chasgantz3059 Před 4 lety

    I remember having a wind up mower in the early 70's. I've been trying to find one again.

  • @mikeslomski7063
    @mikeslomski7063 Před 6 lety +1

    My parents bought a Sears Craftsman small riding mower about the same time that also had a wind up starter. I used that mower many times.

  • @gregoryclemen1870
    @gregoryclemen1870 Před 7 měsíci

    my first lawn mower is a briggs engine( 3 H.P. mod.# 80906 with the first generation( old style) wind up starter made in 1961. this mower was bought used in 1973, and I still use it today with 9 thousand hours on the mower/ engine

    • @MO3MINI
      @MO3MINI  Před 7 měsíci

      Can not beat an old briggs and stratton. I still use one every season from 1972. Lord know its owners. Its very tired but still has more power than any new push mower you can buy today

    • @gregoryclemen1870
      @gregoryclemen1870 Před 7 měsíci

      @@MO3MINI I agree with you 100%, I collect the old briggs cast iron engines that date back to the first mod. P engines that were built in 1919.

  • @richierich396
    @richierich396 Před 5 lety +2

    Back when the decks lasted

  • @rollingstopp
    @rollingstopp Před 10 lety

    nice demo -thanks

  • @williamriley2528
    @williamriley2528 Před 5 lety +1

    Wow... The way-back machine. We had one of these on a bright orange Jacobsen push mower when I was a kid... My dad cussed it. It was good for at least one "F-Bomb" every spring... lmfao...!

  • @axleratio
    @axleratio Před 5 lety

    When I was about 10 years old in the 60s my Dad bought one of the first Toro electric start mowers . I was so fascinated by the fact a lawn mower would start by itself. When he was at work I would go in the the garage and start it over and over again . He kept wondering why he had to keep charging the battery more often than he had to.

  • @wiseal9063
    @wiseal9063 Před 5 lety +1

    we had one like this ,except to engage the starter you just pushed the crank lever down
    and to check the oil there was a sight glass with a rubber bulb on it ,push the rubber bulb and if oil came into the sight glass you were good to go . We had that mower forever .

    • @MO3MINI
      @MO3MINI  Před 5 lety

      Sight glass sounds interesting! Never heard or seen one of those.

  • @MrSTOUT73
    @MrSTOUT73 Před 5 lety

    I remember as a kid (probably 60 years ago!) we had a crank start mower similar to that one. At that time it was the "big thing" in mowers. Ours was self propelled too.

  • @Wildstar40
    @Wildstar40 Před 7 lety +2

    Wow I never seen a wind up starter on a lawn mower before now in my 47 years.
    Now I need to find a mower with a Coffman starter on it LOL !

    • @horsepower0539
      @horsepower0539 Před 5 lety

      You could probably still order that from Sears it was a Craftsman riding mower green the white handled the steers it works real good

  • @kenarnold9132
    @kenarnold9132 Před 6 lety

    Bwa Ha Ha.... just came across this vid. I grew up back in the mid '60's and my father had the same type mower (Montgomery Wards gold color). Also had a little knob you rotated to release it. Bet we changed the coil spring in that crank 5 time throughout the years. Old memories. Thanks!

    • @davestout844
      @davestout844 Před 5 lety

      I had that gold Montgomery Wards mower. I scrapped the mower but kept the crank start.

  • @greenmtnman7714
    @greenmtnman7714 Před 4 lety

    My Dad bought a new mower in 1965 and it had that type of starter.

  • @elijahrobinson2362
    @elijahrobinson2362 Před 6 lety

    An uncle had one of these. It was a light brown model, though. Worked like a charm for him, as did his old Snapper ride on mower.

  • @Rustbelt_Research
    @Rustbelt_Research Před 10 lety

    Man, That's a cool one!

  • @jimr5703
    @jimr5703 Před 5 lety

    I actually had one of these waaay back. The version I got would release the spring tension when you folded the crank and pressed it into place on top of the mower. No switch to fuss with.
    I liked it the first season I had it, but then moved to a home with 3 acres of yard and bought a riding mower.

  • @josephlama4097
    @josephlama4097 Před 9 lety

    I love old lawn mowers especially the that 1966 Briggs & Stratton 3.5 HP wind up starter you wind up the starter and switch to on position my favorite mower.

    • @scottcarlson6246
      @scottcarlson6246 Před 9 lety +2

      This was still the golden age for Briggs and Stratton from the early years up to around 1980. After that, they started going to crap, in my opinion. If you have an older aluminum Kool Bore block like this, hang onto it. The older blocks are WAY better than any recent aluminum block.

    • @MO3MINI
      @MO3MINI  Před 8 lety +1

      +Gatewayuser200 I agree... But nothing has changed, I doubt many of these older mower have been treated any better in their life than the newer mowers. If anything due to there age they have been treated worse! Yet they continue to keep going... Personally I think that's down to better build quality on older mowers. Newer mowers are built for the throw away market of today. Have it a few years and take it to the tip and buy a new one. I think these will be around a far shade longer than the mowers that came out the Briggs factory this year

    • @techmaven5900
      @techmaven5900 Před 8 lety

      +MO3MINI The big killer of modern small engines is the EPA standards they must meet. They're set to run lean air/fuel mixtures to lower emissions and I think this makes them run hotter than the old engines.
      I have 2 Atlas 4HP snow blowers that run great but the exhaust smells rich like my dads old 53 Ford. LOL!

  • @mowerinnovations8602
    @mowerinnovations8602 Před 7 lety +30

    i found a brand new one of those crank handle at the local lawnmower shop it still had the price tag on it

  • @ianmckinley5613
    @ianmckinley5613 Před 5 lety +1

    We had a wind-up Brigs when I was a kid, it could be hard to start. Then the spring broke, dad took the wind-up mechanism off and we would wind a rope around the pulley and pull start it.