Hello ODK members,

Kirby's first lawnmower engine was a two-stroke.
It appeared on the Australian Carter lawnmower from late 1957. The engine - best guess -
was 'made' or assembled under licence from Outboard Marine of Canada.

I document two versions here: the fully governed GE-A1 (requiring no hand throttle control), and the
GE-A3 with throttle hand control. The Carter was advertised as fully automatic, meaning it was the GE-A1.
[NOTE: Carter also offered a hand control using the GE-A3]

The engine was rated at 2 Brake h.p. and it was all-alloy and of the reed valve design,
meaning that the fuel mixture was injected into the crankcase and then scavenged to the combustion chamber.
It was not a loop scavenge design as in the more basic Victa engines of the time.

The governor was mechanical but mounted external to the crankcase. It was situated above the flywheel and
fan, but under the cooling cowl.

This would be an enduring design overseas, but short-lived on Australian rotary mowers.
Here, it would be Victa and Villiers and then the Kirby-Tecumseh 2-strokes that
would define the 1960s 2-stroke lawnmower market.

[Linked Image]