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Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 612
Likes: 1
Qualified Senior
Just wondering how old this mower would be. Have rung a mower place who said don't bother trying to fix the carby on this, change it over to the carby that came later with a priming bulb, apparently the original carbys were problematic. What do the wise heads say? Mower is otherwise fine. Tried to add photos but can't see them in the Preview. The mower is a Rover ES200 XL , is red and the model number is 92508.

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Last edited by CyberJack; 02/05/17 06:45 PM. Reason: Topic Heading.
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That is a Briggs 92508, probably from the early 1980s. It has a VacuJet carburetor with an automatic choke. It was a nice, reliable carburetor that made the mower easier to use than the later PulsaPrime with the primer bulb, but some service places do not read the Briggs manual, and as a result have problems servicing the automatic choke.

If you decide to change to a PulsaPrime carburetor you will need to get the whole carburetor and fuel tank as an assembly - you can't use a VacuJet tank with a PulsaPrime carburetor.

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Thanks Grumpy, so from what you're saying I'll give the carby a clean and not bother with the "upgrade".

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Forgot to ask before but what is the recommended oil for this machine?

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First, if you are going to separate the carburetor from the fuel tank, you need to read the Briggs manual.

Second, for all of the side valve engines AFAIK, Briggs specifies SAE30 engine oil, meeting American Petroleum Institute standards (SF, SG, SH, etc. - they keep bringing out new ones). Briggs says you can use, say, SAE 20W-30, but you should expect to burn quite a bit more of it than you would with straight SAE30. Outdoorking members seem to have verified the truth of this warning.

Joined: Apr 2013
Posts: 336
Apprentice level 4
Gday, I have one of these mowers and it still goes like the day it was made and one of the quietest I have in my small collection ,a gutsy mower /nice [Linked Image]

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G'day Roebuck, it looks like a nice machine, think I'll put some time into mine, most mowers I've worked on have been a little too loud for my liking so if this one is a little quieter that will be good for neighbours and for me grin.

Joined: Jul 2012
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Those engines in my mind are the best for high an low throttle control. An normally run so smooth

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They sure are smooth cheers.

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roebuck, if you want to know the engine's date of manufacture, just tell us the engine's code. One of your pictures shows the model (92508) and type (5157-01), stamped on the cooling cowl - just to the right of the type is another block of numbers which is the code.


Joined: Apr 2013
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Gday Grumpy' my b&s model 92908 type 5185 01 code 8708 2004 I think tiger at the beginning wanted to know. I'm interested in this engine aswell. Hp is 3 1/2 I think.

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Roebuck, yours was manufactured 20/08/1987 and being a 9 cubic inch is most likely a 3.5hp.

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The 9 cubic inch 92908 was advertised as 3.5 hp until 1982 I think. Then both 92908 (PulsaJet version) and 92508 (VacuJet version) were derated to 3 hp. The explanation Briggs gave focused on the fact that they had to reduce the maximum governed speed of the vertical crankshaft engines from 3,500 rpm to 3,000 rpm because of safety concerns relating to blade tip speed and how hard the blades could throw stones. The horizontal crankshaft versions continued to be governed to 3,500 rpm. I don't recall them increasing the advertised power of the 9 cubic inch vertical crankshaft engines after that, but I could be wrong. Nowadays they avoid referring to power output, having lost a lawsuit on the subject of advertised power. They got away with it for several decades before that happened. The advertised 3 hp was probably less than 2 hp when the engine was trimmed and fitted to a mower. Briggs was not the only culprit - it was usual practice for engine manufacturers to advertise gross power, not nett power. The same thing was done by car manufacturers up until the 1970s, then they switched to nett power to avoid the same kind of litigation that the small engine people encountered in the 2000s. So, if you know someone with a 1960s or 70s muscle car who brags about its power, just snigger a bit and move on. The horses were very small ponies in those days.

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My mower's code is 92508 5157 01 85102505, so I'm tipping that the engine was manufactured in 1985.

It has a Vacu-jet carby which I don't have much experience with. Once I get the carby/fuel tank off the mower I should be right but I've had problems with the governor/throttle linkages. Is the process for taking the Vacu-jet off the same as for the Pulsa-jets?

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Tiger, your engine's manufacture date was 25 October, 1985, and it was made in Briggs' Poplar Bluff, Missouri, engine plant.

The VacuJet carburetor was a cheaper alternative to the more complicated PulsaJet. The difference was that the VacuJet used carburetor venturi suction to suck fuel up from the fuel tank, through the main jet, to the discharge nozzles. The PulsaJet had a fuel pump which continuously pumped fuel up to a small secondary fuel tank in the top of the main fuel tank, allowing the secondary tank to overflow continuously. Venturi vacuum just had to suck the fuel up the very small, and precisely constant, distance from the top of the secondary tank to the discharge nozzles. This made the air/fuel ratio considerably more consistent in the PulsaJet. In practice the VacuJet is rather unsatisfactory in the deep fuel tanks used on horizontal crankshaft engines, but it was not really an issue with the shallow tanks on the vertical crankshaft engines.

The downside of the PulsaJet on vertical crankshaft engines is that its fuel pump diaphragm (including the pump's flap valves) is sandwiched between the fuel tank and carburetor, instead of just having a gasket there as the VacuJet does. This means the vertical crankshaft PulsaJet requires more care in assembly to the tank, than the VacuJet does. In the case of the 92000 series engines, which had automatic chokes, the PulsaJet's diaphragm had to be pre-loaded when assembling the fuel tank to the carburetor, and this requirement has been the downfall of many mower repair shops which failed to do it, thus preventing the choke from working and the mower from starting. Some of the unsuccessful mechanics then waged a public relations war against both PulsaJet and VacuJet, recommending use of the PulsaPrime.

The VacuJet is considerably easier to work on than the PulsaJet, but I suggest you should read the Briggs manual and follow its instructions.

So far as removing the carburetor and fuel tank, as an assembly, from the engine is concerned, the process is much the same for PulsaJet or VacuJet - the governor link is a bit of a pain for both, but it's nothing major. The rubber breather elbow looks the same for both but it isn't, you need to use the correct one or it won't fit properly.

Joined: Apr 2013
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Very interesting information and thanks grumpy ,

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Thanks Grumpy for that thorough and helpful reply, am ready to tackle this job, if it's not too cold tonight might have a go at it.

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I'm going to have a go at this machine tonight, I have a Briggs Small engine book which shows what to do in order to take the carby off the petrol tank but I can't find anything that describes the very first stage where you take the snorkel off the petrol tank. I'm assuming that you just unscrew the snorkel off but are there any other precautions to take here?

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Briggs did not make the snorkel, so it isn't covered in their manuals. You remove it in the same way as a normal Briggs air cleaner: just undo the central vertical screw, and you can lift off the little air box under it. Remember though, you must put that screw back in to run the engine. You don't need the air cleaner, but you do need that screw, or it will become very rich - perhaps too rich to even run.

You then have to remove the air cowl, then the vertical pull starter, before you can take the tank and carburetor off as a single unit.

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Thanks Grumpy that explains it, I've spent a bit of time searching the net trying to find a similar set-up with the snorkel but found nothing, obviously not something that caught on so it (snorkel) was discarded.

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