I recently put together five sturdy old Southern Cross mowers with KXD ECB engines and got all 5 of them going without too much trouble. There were a few minor hiccups, one leaking a bit of oil, another burning a bit of oil, another one flooding. But nothing too serious and all problems that were easily ironed out.
About two weeks ago I took possession of an old H. G. Palmer mower with a Kirby-Lauson VK-30 engine. In contrast, everything about this mower and engine proved difficult. It was so compact it was like working on a modern whipper snipper. However on pulling the engine down I was amazed at how clean the parts all were and everything inside was in top condition. Valves and rings good, gears good, bearings good. It looked new in fact. However I was a bit concerned about the quality of material that these engines are made from. Believe me when I tell you that the stuff coming from China today is far superior. Despite their reputation for being built here in Australia during the 1960s, these Kirby-Lauson engines were clearly made in a hurry and out of junk metal.
I put the mower all together and even painted it as there were no oil leaks to be seen.
Kicked it off and it started first go, ran flat out for about 5 seconds then gave a rattle and clunk and stopped dead. I could not start it again. The starter cup had come loose and I thought that must have been the noise I heard.
Then began the process of trying to track down the cause. I pondered over the carby settings for a long while. Changed the plug. Cleaned the points, checked for spark. Everything looked okay until I removed the inspection plate and took a peek. The valves were not working when I turned the engine over! So I drained the oil and found two gear teeth in the oil pan. OH NO!!! Then shook the crankcase and heard it rattle! Straight away I new something catastrophic had taken place.
Here is what I found. That metal is as weak and brittle as chalk. No wonder it snapped. I wonder if somebody before me has soaked these parts in acid or something corrosive? Or maybe they have just gone brittle with age.
![[Linked Image]](https://www.outdoorking-forum.com.au/forum/uploads/usergals/2017/07/full-10975-35181-p1010236.jpg)
Not much hope for this mower now and it will be impossible to find replacement gearing. Think I will just scrap it and sell it off as parts to recoup my losses. I spent about $300 on this mower (didn't seem that much until I added up all the receipts!). I'm sticking with Southern Cross from now on, especially the models that used their own engines. Manuals for Kirby-Lauson are also rather vague and difficult to follow and they do not give the necessary information, unlike Southern Cross manuals which even provided detailed instructions for the home user on how to change the rings. Kirby-Lauson get the big thumbs down from me.