Hi all, hope everyone is well, I'm new to the forum. Great amount of info on here, from heaps of members
Need some help if possible identfying a 2 stroke Victa mower, Ive read a few other posts on here, which has helped but still cant id what mower it is:(
Number on block behind carby is 260 87 and also EN72804Z Im guessing the 87 is the year as i read that in another post. From what ive read it is a POWER-TORQUE 2 stroke
No sticker on top of the air filter housing im afraid, there is a 427 stamped into plastic on the side of air filter housing however. And also a 427 stamp on side of head No sticker on top of mower cover either which makes it a little harder again (well for unexperienced like myself)
Ive also posted some photos hope you guys can help.
Hi Charlie Welcome here, what are your plans for this and do you have the missing carby?
It is an early PT base as it still has the 3 ribs along the top of the schute. Apart from that they made millions of those and by now many parts have been mixed and matched so identification is often iffy..
WOW old newspaper photos those were the days:). I noticed both photos of the commando cowling on newspaper photos are not the same as mine (the cowlings flat part and cowling sticker goes from front to back on the commandos while it goes left to right on my 87 and the pacer and matador newspaper photos
I imagine over the years some parts have been changed which makes identification hard. I took some more part numbers to maybe try and help identify ST12644A - taken from starter wheel assembly CA09338G - Blade holder assembly AF07481 - Inside snorkel
The match i found was "V160 cowling vantage" on page 24-25
I actually picked this mower up as it was being thrown out. The carby had been dismantled and missing a few bits in carby, no spark plug, broken spark lead I originally brought it back home to use for parts for my 83 silverstreak, as the reving on my silverstreak is being a little irratic lately, so i took some carby parts and sparkplug onto this 87 mower, and it started first pull! While stripping the parts of my silverstreak, i noticed the carby was filthy on my silverstreak, so ive decided to purchase a couple carby kits for both mowers, to try and get the both going.
The G4 or LM (im not sure of difference if some1 could point that out) carby on my silverstreak and this 87 mower are different
My old silverstreak has a very different black diaphram and also a "fast slow" dial, while the newer 87 has the green diaphram and does not have this slow fast dial
Ive taken some more photos for you guys which might help in further identifcation, plus of the differences in the carby between my 83silverstreak and this 87 victa
Hello Charlie21, nice to have another Victaphile join the Victa 2 stroke army lol. Good on you saving it instead of going down the path of stripping for bits. It looks to have a good body. That top belongs on the lowest priced models with it's smaller fuel cap and more exposed engine. I quite like the exposed engine look myself. In the 80's era there were three main tiers of engine dress cowl. Your one shown, a lower slung square one with bigger fuel cap that covered the engine fins, and a more fancy one that sloped at the front beyond the exhaust. I have examples of all three in my collection. Can we see your Silver Streak? That chassis was way better than the pressed steel version. Does it have a good catcher? They were the weak point as well as erosion of the base in extremely sandy soil and damage from striking rocks and stones.
Ahh, if only victa had kept producing the thumblatch catcher series, they would be in better shape today!
Yes it is difficult to positively id this mower when you don't know if the parts are original ,like fuel tank ,wheels,handle bars,engine ,etc.
The 1987 newspaper ad was the only 1987 ad I could find with the large Victa decal on the front of the base instead of the small Victa badge.
I found a 1985 Commando Victa mower rusting away out back and thought it looked very similar except for the top plastics on motor and my model number on the air cleaner says it's a 1984 model but the engine number shows 1985.
Hello Max, MF, Norm, Tyler, and Charlie. I'm glad this is not my area of expertise!
Charlie, you have Victa experts commenting here. I'll just throw in what I found. I don't know what it means.
Victa does seem to follow a certain logic.
Max has pointed out the difficulties here - after three decades! Replacement parts, etc.
But even if the parts were original, it may not narrow the field to identification. This is because Victa never published parts lists for store brands.
Victa were quite happy to customize mowers to client's need, but would never offer the latest features for store brands. At best, Victa offered the same features as their then current budget range.
Looking at this case, the best evidence was the '260 87' Charlie gave.
In my incomplete Victa Spares Manual for 86-87 I found a reference to a '260'. [see below].
Also note that the 'Wildcat' does appear again in the Victa Code reference for 1987-88, but does not appear in the 1987-88 Victa Spares Manual.
My best guess is a Wildcat, or a store brand made with premium wheels, but with budget cowling, handle and decals.
Maxwestern's mower in his pics is an example of the 1980's mid tier cover I talked about in my last post. Here is one with the "highest status" cover with the protruding front.
Ahh, if only victa had kept producing the thumblatch catcher series, they would be in better shape today!
Hi guys, sorry for the delayed reply. been doing 15 hour days this whole week... wake up, work, sleep, repeat. joys of coming to the silly season!
Thanks for the posts, and i think Jack might be on to something there espicially since it had the 260 on the wildcat I see what Mowerfreak and Maxwestern are showing with the different cowling tiers. Thankyou for showing them
From re lookin at newspaper ads, the matador Tyler mentioned looks like it had a full sticker on front of mower (see where the white is) so it could be that still but the 260 jack showed, looks like it has the most revelance
I got some photos of my Silverstreak 83. Shes not in the best shape, but, best mower ive ever used. Dad bought it second hand in 96, which we used heavily to cut an almost half acre block. (used to take me a good half a day to do!) eventually dad bought a 4 stroke masport maybe in 2002, and i continued to used this silverstreak over the masport as i felt like it didnt bog down as much as the masport if the lawn was abit long, plus the masport catcher used to give me the sh!ts!, dropping all the time. So when I moved out, dad ended up giving me the 83 silverstreak, i ended up doing piston and rings in it about 8 years ago, and has been brilliant since, and my god can does she rev!, like shes going to take off! Just lately a little carby issues but now i got all the parts to redo carby. Only other thing it has, while cutting the lawn, the height adjustment will jump. I need to check why its doing this.
But overall the catcher is brilliant on the silverstreak.. it never and i mean never falls off. Good solid mower, apart from dad having to rivet an aluminium plate:D. This is why i cant let go of it and continue to repair it:)
Mowerfreak, "Does it have a good catcher? They were the weak point as well as erosion of the base in extremely sandy soil and damage from striking rocks and stones." For which mowers had these common issues? Was this the silverstreak issues or the 87 series issues?
Charlie21 thanks for the pics! That looks to be a Corsair base with a Silver Streak engine/ engine cover fitted. The Silver Streak base is painted in hammered silver but is otherwise the same as that. It looks like that base fell victim to a rock strike hence the armour plating. That machine sure looks like it earns its keep, good on you for replacing the rings and piston so it can continue going strong. Too many of my mowers sit for years at a time unused. Your one works hard! That particular catcher shape is a keeper. They were one of three main catcher shapes that fit on that series of mower base and that moulding seems to be the most hardy from cracking in my observations. If only Norm K lived within reasonable driving distance from you, as he regularly throws away good bases like yours as he has no use for them without a suitable catcher.
I have a similar mower in my collection called the Corvette with the older non ball bearing wheels. You certainly notice the difference in the pushing. This one is the first series, the mark II got the ball bearing wheels like yours.
Ahh, if only victa had kept producing the thumblatch catcher series, they would be in better shape today!
I was thinking the silver streak didn't have a green deck MF - although they are completely identical under the paint.
Like the 'vette, I have an identical one from the curbside collection in march - need to patch the muffler, new pull cord, and gap the coil (rounded bolt though and can't get it off) - will get done over christmas
when I picked it up I had the big bob in the boot, and the corvette and Monaro 4 stroke on the back seat haha
I was thinking the silver streak didn't have a green deck MF - although they are completely identical under the paint.
Like the 'vette, I have an identical one from the curbside collection in march - need to patch the muffler, new pull cord, and gap the coil (rounded bolt though and can't get it off) - will get done over christmas
Hi Tyler and Charlie 21, Tyler, on your first point that is correct. Exact same base. On the second paragraph regarding the rounded bolt, have you tried vice grips? Two other options are the Super wrench set that grip pipes. One saved my skin removing a rounded nut in a tight spot holding the metal covering on the 160 on a beaten up VC 160 bitsa I covered in another thread. Also you can get these clever sockets with inward facing teeth that are designed to tackle rounded bolts it nuts and other odd shaped fasteners.
Charlie 21, I forgot to clarify that the mower prone to cracking catchers and rock strikes is your older alloy deck mower, as shown with your dad's patch up job. Your catcher appears to be in good nick although the lip at the bottom of the entry isn't visible and that is a vulnerable part to cracking and damage. With the second 1987 mower it's rusting of the steel base you have to worry about. That's why it's important to wash and/ or brush out any caked up clippings from nooks on the underside regularly, especially where the handles attach too the body as that is a notorious rot area, particularly the left hand side.
Ahh, if only victa had kept producing the thumblatch catcher series, they would be in better shape today!
You've got your finger on the pulse. I picked up a 3/8 set for $29.00 last week at my local Repco. Made in Taiwan not China, that's what really sold me.
Ahh, if only victa had kept producing the thumblatch catcher series, they would be in better shape today!
Hi Tyler, as a last resort if you can get at the head of the bolt with a cut off wheel and cut the head off, then you can remove the coil and then get the vice grips etc onto the stub to get it out.
MF, I used to have loads of the F/C alloy bodies here but the supply of these seems to have completely dried up, once where I could pick up 10/15 mowers in a job lot is no more. Not that I want them but even Briggs and Stratton have almost vanished, I only have 4 untested/looked at Briggs in the shed. 12 months ago I never thought I would ever get close to going through all the mowers here. I have about 30 tested/running PT motors but I only have 2 F/C tested/running ones. They are getting really hard to find these days, I might have to start paying more for these.
I wonder if that pattern is nation wide and power torques are well on their way to getting rarer since production ceased? I think people are still throwing them out at a feverish rate due to little issues or attrition due to increased incidence of straight fueling by people who have no idea. Hopefully people are discovering them and taking then away before the trucks arrive to crush them in the compactor.
Ahh, if only victa had kept producing the thumblatch catcher series, they would be in better shape today!
Not seeing any mowers being thrown out of late, not even Chondas, no idea where they are ending up. I still have over 30 running PT's that I can build into mowers if I can come up with wheels.
Still plenty on the roadsides here in Medowie, geebuz, I'd be divorced well and truly if I picked up every mower I see here with monotonous regularity. I throw newspapers 2 to 3 days a week and at O dark O 'clock you'd be surprised how good the pickings are for an alert "that'll come in handy one-day" picker like myself I question the mentality and the capabilities of most modern-day households these days, how hard is it to change a spark plug or clean the air filter on that mower before you decide to hoik it out?. Honestly, the waste I see is stunning, to say the least.
" Don't worry, if it ain't broke, I'll fix it for ya"