Did you leave gas in it all that time? If so, drain it out and try some fresh 93 octane. If it was uncovered there may be water in the fuel as well. Drain the tank and also the carburetor. There may be a drain valve on the bottom of the carburetor bowl that you can press or unscrew and the fuel will drain out.
If that doesn't work, you may need to call a repair shop and have them clean the carburetor.
Going forward I recommend using fuel stabilizer and 91 or 93 octane fuel.
very new to these types of engines. so bear with me. last year bought a troy snow blower. worked fine all winter long. i accidentally left the blower outside all year long and now this winter i went to start it and it didnt go. any ideas of things to check. thanks guys
Good vid with some excellent tips.
cardo1111 3 months ago
@redneckboy6983
Did you leave gas in it all that time? If so, drain it out and try some fresh 93 octane. If it was uncovered there may be water in the fuel as well. Drain the tank and also the carburetor. There may be a drain valve on the bottom of the carburetor bowl that you can press or unscrew and the fuel will drain out.
If that doesn't work, you may need to call a repair shop and have them clean the carburetor.
Going forward I recommend using fuel stabilizer and 91 or 93 octane fuel.
HDReynoldsGenMdse 1 year ago
@HDReynoldsGenMdse lol. mine is injector fed...no carburetor. although. mine just had a bad fuel line blocking the line going into the pump.
bait28 1 year ago
hello,
very new to these types of engines. so bear with me. last year bought a troy snow blower. worked fine all winter long. i accidentally left the blower outside all year long and now this winter i went to start it and it didnt go. any ideas of things to check. thanks guys
redneckboy6983 1 year ago