If this video helped you, please consider clicking on the THANKS button above 🙌 Here's some other Honda videos you might like: th-cam.com/video/rx0efSZpG7E/w-d-xo.html
What you also need are the Briggs and Honda oil extractors! As seen in The same Bruce video. If you’re interested in the details. I can email some photos.
Hi. I commented here about an HR214 lawnmower carburator change. I don't know why my comments and your replies aren't here anymore. Anyways. I changed the carburator everything is in place and the mower problem stopping when changing the manual lever from choke to hi or low is corrected but when I change from hi to low it revs at the same speed. Any ideas?
I’ve watched many “ so called “ experts on the maintenance of a Honda carburetor but yours was the most direct , step by step method - easy to understand for even a beginner like myself ! I was ready to bring in my mower ( only 8 months old ) for repair until I came across your video !
Ma’am. I’m a diesel tech by trade and haven’t been able to get my mower to run worth a damn. It’s a Honda with the same exact carb set up as this mower. This video fixed that. Hats off to you!!!! Fires up first pull with ZERO issues now. Keep up what you’re doing.
After spending three hours fiddling with reinstalling the carb of my gcv190, I found your video, followed your guidance and BINGO, got it done in just a few minutes! Your many many helpful tips and clear instructions made me confident that I can keep my equipment in top shape. I learned the hard way to mind the float valve…luckily found it at my feet:). Thank you Lawnmower Lady!❤
Just like everyone said previously, you took the time and really showed in detail on how to take it apart and then reassemble the carb makes it easy to service or replace if you have to.
I searched and searched and finally came across your video by searching auto choke Troybilt. I can’t give you enough praise! Every guy that did a video had a fraction of a fraction of details that you did! I was stumped, but you squared me away. By far the BEST VIDEO of any instructional how to videos out there! I’m an HVAC tech by trade, but am now many steps closer to becoming my own diy small engine repair tech as well. THANK YOU!
You did an excellent job explaining how to remove,clean,reassemble this Honda gc160 dirty carb to a great 1 pull to fire up outcome! Keep up the great work!
I didn't watch how the float needle dropped out when I took my carb apart. Yours is the only video I've watched thus far which shows the direction the needle goes into the port. That was very helpful as I was about to install the needle upside down. This was my first stab at small engine carburetor cleaning.
Thanks LL! You did a great job of showing the detail points that others left me scratching my head on, the atomizer jet, the float needle, etc. excellent close-up work. keep on rockin' it!
Never took a carb apart before but I got the clog out of my jet and my mower running in no time after watching this video. I used a piece of a plant that was skinny enough to bore the hole out. Thanks, Lawnmower Lady!
Omg 😮you saved my life. Your video has taught me so much. I had to rewind how to screenshot it took me all day, but I feel so confident now about my own mower I cannot thank you enough I literally could start crying.!!!! 😅😊A MILLION LITTLE THANK YOUSE 🙏🏼🙏🏼
Another happy 'customer' here, watched your video the other day and fixed my mower in about thirty minutes. The hardest part for me was pulling off the fuel line, I think. My machine is only a few years old and wasn't that dirty, but there was a little gunk somewhere that was causing it to hunt quite a bit. Running much stronger now. Thank you.
Thanks. Some good tips in your video that I didn’t see elsewhere. If it wasn’t for getting those two bolts through so many assemblies this would be a piece of cake!
I have since fabricated some M6 threaded rod to replace the bolts, to assist with that gaggle of gaskets. My more recent Honda carb service videos show that. Thanks for watching!
Thank you so much for your information and willingness to share and teach. Your videos, particularly this one and other on this carb type, were very helpful and very well put together. I have been fiddling with my Troy built mower for a while now and each time it’s either just as bad or even maybe worse…until finally it would only run while choked then would stall out. So this carb breakdown was exactly what I needed to give me the confidence to dive in all the way and fix it right! Thanks again!
Lawnmower Lady, this is probably the best video I have seen in a long time. It's the first video on carburetor where someone begins by showing you how to remove the carburetor and putting it back on step by step. I had gotten fluster with the process. Thanks Lawnmower Lady.
Thank you Lawnmower Lady!! I have a Yard machine with a Honda engine, it won't stay on longer than about 3 or 4 minutes, about 20 feet of lawnmowing 😢. I think this is my next step. With your guidance, I think I'll successful!
Be sure and check your fuel cap. The vent might be clogged with debris. Next time it stops, crack open the fuel cap and see if it starts up. Without a vent to atmospheric pressure, as the fuel leaves the tank, it can create a vacuum that a gravity fed fuel system can't overcome.
@@TheLawnmowerLady already unplugged the vent holes in the gas cap along with changing the air filter, oil and spark plug. So, with your awesome assistance, it's off to clean the carb. Have looked into a ultrasonic cleaner too. Love your videos, your an excellent teacher and thanks for sharing!
Thanks for this video. My small engine guy retired so I'm on my own. My GCV160 on a Craftsman won't run except a few seconds with starter fluid in it. There is fuel flow and the spark plug looks good and it will run for a few seconds which tells me there's spark. So it comes down to the carburetor which I took off and mine looks nothing like yours. It was fairly clean and the needle looked ok. Stumped, I ordered a new carburetor though there is no obvious fault with the one I have. The mover is a 2019 and been kept in a garage. I've never had an issue with a Honda engine before. You video was great for showing me things to look for though my carburetor is slightly different.
Did you take out the idle jet on top? Yours might have a plastic idle speed adjustment screw that needs to be removed. The plastic jet cones out and has to be clean. Tom, at @vintageemginerepairs has a great video on that style of carb.
Thanks a bunch for clear, detailed, and timestamped video! My lawnmower stopped working halfway through mowing my lawn. It would start, but immediately stop. Google suggested cleaning my carburetor would be a likely fix. This video let me confidently take it apart, and more importantly, put it back together again, fixing my lawnmower and saving me from the humiliation of my lawn looking like Ronaldo at the 2002 World Cup.
We've had this Honda GVC160 motor on an emergency lawnmower for the last 10 years. It's never run well and I've spent many hours trying to get it perform smoothly. In Australia they come with a manual choke and the idle screw is placed in such a way as to make it impossible to adjust once the carburetor is back on the motor. Along with the air box and the gaskets, they are the work of the devil. I take my hat off to you madam.
I took the jet out and the atomizer rod came out and didn't know which way it went back, until I saw your concise breakdown and rebuild. Thank you! (I had it in correctly, but my luck dictates that I probably didn't)
Lawnmower lady, you are the best. You saved me money time and frustration. And I will only be using true fuel from now on. Excellent video, thanks so much.
Great video and great job of explaining everything you were doing and why. I have this same mower and have had the carb off before but your video was a great refresher and I learned some new things. Thanks-you are a natural teacher.
By far the best video on this carb. I was planning on just tearing into it, as I've cleaned a handful of carbs, but I'm glad i watched this first, because i would have probably messed the gasket orientation up when I pulled it apart.
Stella, that was a nice demonstration and narration of cleaning the Honda carbs. Ive wrestled with enough of those gaskets, heat shields, etc. I went to the hardware store and bought 2 bolts ,1/4 inch longer and cut the heads off and use them as studs. Made my life alot easier and they work on all Honda small engines. Keep the videos coming. Looks like you enjoy what your doing! 👏👏👍🇺🇸 Roger
Thanks Mr. Roger for watching! I have some long threaded rods from a three arm puller that I use sometimes (when I remember :embarrassed: ) every now and then.
Wonderful video. I'm a certified Honda small engine tech and thought you explained the carb clean process so the average homeowner could understand and follow the process. The only point I would add, and maybe you already did this, but I would have drained the gas tank as there was obvious water in the bowl. If you already did it prior to the video. I apologize. Thanks again...
Thank you Mr Larry! Indeed I do lots of things that don't end up in the video if I feel its is getting too long. I will say, my editing skills have tightened up and I can include more things. I appreciate your views and you comments. Cheers!
Thank you you are the first person to show me were the needle goes and doesn't have the camera 5 feet away and covering the whole process with their hands
Tool tip: I used a piece of multi strand copper wire with the end stripped to clean out all the small holes. One strand for the smallest, a couple twisted together for the biggest ones.
An awesome job of explanation step by step. Warning about every step of the way, while cleaning & putting it together. Keep up the good work, I have GCV 160 Honda. Your video was the best one from all of them. I am quite confident that I can repair my Carb. George
I am real familiar with these GVC 160s what a great video you made. thank you for making everything look easy. but I always called your emulsion tube a venturi tube thanks for the correction I will add that one emotion tube sludge is the main thing on nearly every carburetor that causes surging rpms. anyway it's great listening to do you do this for people. You do a great clear explanation. Thumbs up.
Glad it was helpful! I often call it an atomizer ( I come from antique scooter world) and this is what Dellorto calls it in their older documentation. I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
I’ve always stored my mower with Stabil original formula stabilizer never had trouble till a couple years ago or so. Till my power valve stuck after I fixed it I watched a Stabil Marine 360 stabilizer. I got to thinking about it the marine formula it’s made to absorb condensation from the boat tanks I’ll try it in my mower and in storage. For the last two or more years it works really well doesn’t gel up to clog the carburetor. I’m using regular unleaded with the crappy ethanol and not a moment’s trouble. Have a Blessed One. Greetings from Silverstreet South Carolina.
I use my zero turn mower about 12 months of the year. I also use 87 octane gas in all of my mowers too. I have a Murray 38 inch that has had always had 87 octane gas in it. Never had NO problems with it
Great work here, and thank you for not saying "go ahead and..." constantly, like most of the male "experts" do in their videos! Keep up the great work.
lawnmower lady - thanks for the to the point and very informational video. it was just what i needed to get things apart and more importantly back together.
This is such a great video! Super helpful and she really knows her stuff. A great tutorial on how to troubleshoot my carb issues. Well worth sending her a “Thanks” tip.
When I work on my Troybilt TB 240 w/ the Honda GCV 160 engine I use two pieces of wood dowel rods cut a bit longer than the carburetor bolts and insert them into the threaded holes in the engine block and assemble as you did. Then pull one rod out insert your bolt, thread on loosely and repeat for the other side
Thanks Mr. Ben. I actually have some M6 threaded rod just for that purpose. I was really only removing the airbox to make it easier for the camera to see pulling the carb bowl and draining. I wasn't planning to pulling the entire jello filled carb.
Thanks! Honda makes a very pricey “tool” for this that is really the bolts with no heads. I fabricated the same thing with two 6mm threaded studs. Most any other of my other Honda carburetor videos show this. Makes the job easier. Cheers!
Nicely done, thank you. If you apply a small amount of dish-soapy water onto the outside of the rubber hoses, the clamps will slide along a bit easier. Of course, you don’t want to get any inside the hose.
The large gasket between the carburetor and auto choke , which Honda calls an air guide, is shown in the reverse orientation on the factory parts assembly diagram. The way you have it assembled means the small hole doesn't align with the air passage on the carburetor.
On this particular model, it doesn't matter. Look closely at 12:47 That passage is sealed on the carb. There is no mating passage on the auto choke actuator. ( look closely during the re-assembly) It's commonly called a heat shield, and yes, on some models it does go on the other way. This mower came from the factory this way, no reason to flip it, IMO.
Nice clear video. I do believe though, that you have the large square gasket the wrong way around. At least the markings on mine indicate that. The small high section in the corner is facing rear, not forward 👍
I think I did the same thing as you, matching up the witness marks. I didn't occur to me it was wrong until several months later. Maybe wrong from the factory? Maybe the fiddle faeries? Thanks for watching!
The OLD MAN at EP just saying that it is nice to see the ladies getting involved with small engine repair. A handy tool to get if you do not have it is a pressure pump to check for seating needle valves prior to installing the carb. Nikki carbs are the worst.
Thank you Mr. Wayne! I do actually test the needle and seat, but I figure YT would flag my video as inappropriate if I included pics of the old suck and blow with me lips wrapped around the fuel barb. Lol. I'm often too lazy to get out my miti-vac. Cheers!
Your welcome and good luck on the channel it takes time but is well worth it if you are dedicated to providing quality repair and service videos. Keep up the good work.
@@waynestefinashen239 Many thanks! I've watched EP channel for a few years now and I appreciate the succinct and the on point commentary. I strive to keep it simple myself for the average DIYer.
Later models have captive carb mounting bolts which make reassembly much easier. The air box goes on after the carb is in place and is held on with two 10mm nuts. There is no need to remove the top cover either. The idle speed sounds a bit high.
Hello Lawn Mower Lady. I came across your videos yesterday. You were working on a Honda mower and removing the carburetor. You removed the two 10mm bolts holding the card and used two studs to hold the carburetor. Ingenious!!! What are they and where can I get some? Thanks
Running the motor until it dies upon storage is good practice indeed but I found this will leaves some fuel in the carb bowl, I also loosen the carb bowl nut and let any residual fuel drain out. Keep safe and be merry
The Rooster is going to plead with you for that shirt 😆 I got one of those Honda's out back with the same issue plus they over filled the oil 🤨 Guitar strings oh I like that plan !
What caused this, using ethanol gasoline? I use non ethanol gas and so far have had little problems Also use sea foam to help protect my small engines, Good job explaining your cleaning procedure
Thanks for watching Mr Fred. Yes, ethanol laced fuel tends to separate and once the alcohol evaporates, you are left with water. It sinks to the lowest point in the system. I believe the gelatinous goo is the detergents induced in refinery process reacting with the water that was left. Non-ethanol fuel obviates these problems, but unfortunately is not available everywhere. Cheers!
Hi Stela, thanks for sharing this video. It was helpful. I have GC160 Honda engine as well and look like I messed up with the engine block threads while putting back 2 big bolts after carb cleaning. Not sure what options I got now and I need this mower soon. I checked bolts threads are good and now one of bolt inside of engine block is keep on turning and it is stuck inside of the engine block🥲. I started engine and it was leaking from carburetor because it is not tightening.
That's a problem with the soft aluminum of the head. The only real solution is a thread repair kit. You can find a M6 Heli-coil or other similar kit at most any auto-parts store.
Ahhh, you made me go look, LOL. I got these: amzn.to/4b4RQhL I like the grippy (sort of) nature and at 9mil thick they are pretty durable. Many other gloves are 6 or 8mil and tear too easily. That said, no gloves will hold up to carburetor spray, but these do pretty well in gasoline ( or petrol for my EU friends) and brake cleaner. I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Wish you'd spent more time on the pilot jet. 4th time tearing down & cleaning the same carb and resetting the governor. Cleaned the fuel tank too, but it still surges like crazy. All the videos I've seen have me convinced it's the pilot jet beneath the Phillips screw. I can't get anything to penetrate the hole at the bottom center including smallest torch tip cleaner, lemon juice & oven cleaner. However, I can see 2 horizontal holes at the bottom of the female threads. One is on the same side as the part number and the other directly across from it. One is a little larger & I may have made a little headway there. Not really sure. Steve's smal engine saloon shows going into that center hole with a micro drill bit, with emphasis on when it finally gives way. If not for seeing that, I'd say there is no hole there and it's one or both of the horizontal that actually transport fuel. After more videos, gonna try more lemon juice, pine sol if I have any, possibly boiling, and the micro drill bit(s) if they have 'em at Harbor Freight. Frustrating . . .
This video goes into much greater detail on that pilot circuit about 5 minutes in: th-cam.com/video/wJPM_ArLSgg/w-d-xo.html I use old guitar strings. The smallest E-string should be able to go straight into the jet from the top. I use the G-string to go into the front and make sure I see it looking into the top of the carb. As much as I don't like carburetor spray, it's probably the best thing to dissolve any varnish from old fuel. Edit: It just occurred to me, I have had some of those older Honda double walled fuel lines collapse. Hope this helps.
@@TheLawnmowerLady Thank you so much the reply. I was surprised! I watched the video you linked and appreciate it very much! A quick update: Boiling water poured directly into the pilot jet hole seems to have helped. I now have spray coming up out of the pilot jet. However, I didn't try going thru it again with a torch tip cleaner (from either direction), but I will now. Still surged like crazy upon startup. I experimented blocking some of the intake air with my finger and it would even out, but hard to keep the sweet spot. I taped it off as best i could and got to mowing. It still surged some, intermittently though. Oddly, not as much when pulling it backwards nor when plowing through tall thick grass going fwd, and randomly not at all for 10 - 30 seconds at a time The air cleaner housing & cover are pretty beat up, as are the gaskets from all the assembling & disassembling. Replacement might be the ticket. Got some micro drill bits (only $2.99) but don't know if I should bother with them since I was able to confirm get spray coming up out of the pilot jet. I will definitely check the fuel line & possibly replace it. Will keep u posted. Thks again!
Hi there , Thanks for all your very informative videos. They all are really good. If I may ask a question. What do you suggest I do next with a Honda Jonsered GCV 160 That won't start I already changed the Thermowax plug, cleaned up the carburetor, what next? Thanks in advance for your assistance with this issue.
Diagnosing a non-starter via internet is near on impossible, but my best advice is to start with the basics: spark, fuel and air. Those three things are crucial. I wish I could be more helpful. Thanks for watching.
Dang, sorry about that. Was it just not starting? Does it have spark? Can you squirt a bit of fuel of starter fluid into the carb and get it cough a bit?
@@TheLawnmowerLady before putting it away for the season I added fuel stabilizer. Last year the machine was working normal but I tried this season to cut the grass and didn't start anymore, I put some starter fluid on it and didn't do anything, I tried also replacing the spark plug and still didn't work so I'm digging a little bit more on the ignition coil and taking some measurements on that and see if that is what is wrong with it, I also noticed that one of the gasket was missing(one close to the air filter) but I don't know if that will make the machine fail. thanks for responding (FYI my machine is a Husqvarna engine Honda GCV160)
@@TheLawnmowerLady okay thanks I measure the coil and comparing with the information that I got on the web seems that the coil is falling off also I’m going to get the gaskets to make sure that everything is on place. Do you think that I should check something else?
love your video!!! This question is for my pushing mower, I feel like I did everything, cleaning the carburetor and fuel line , clean up the fuel tank cap et al, my Craftsman/Honda is still starting and dies 15 seconds later, what is the problem?
I watched this one again! As in all of your videos, the camera work is excellent and no annoying music ! I was hoping to learn more about your ultrasonic process. I heard you once say that you like Pinesol as a cleaning solvent? Do you have anything more on this? Such as the mixture? effects on the parts? Thanks, and great job.....again!
Thank you very much! Although I've experimented with some music, mostly when I speed up the repetitious bits, I hope it's not too annoying 😇I think I went into a bit more detail on this video th-cam.com/video/JJ2AW0OlMYs/w-d-xo.html on my ultrasonic. I use PineSol most all of the time, about 5:1 water/PineSol. I find it has enough solvent properties to clear even badly varnished carbs. It doesn't really discolor the carb bodies, unlike orange and green de-greaser type solutions. It brightens up the brass bits as well. If I have rusted bits, CLR works well, but discolors parts badly. I wait a day or two, for all the sediment to settle on the bottom, and them filter the solution through a coffee filter. I can use the same fluid for several months. I really appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Great video, very helpful. Quicky question about the choke plug: After noting the position of that wax plug with a cold engine, when the engine gradually warms up, does that plug draw back into the block or does it extend further outward?
Very nice video LawnMowerLady. I always enjoy your videos & manage to pick up a tip or two in the process. Just curious, what kind of ultrasonic cleaner do you own?
I recently did a video on that: th-cam.com/video/P6h54CpcotM/w-d-xo.html If you are looking for the exact one I use: amzn.to/3KMB76N Thanks for watching!
Thank you so much 🤗 I've enjoyed watching your channel(s). Your voice-over style keeps your videos moving at a great pace, and you cover a lot of great info.
Thank you @kaka saggu I appreciate that. I hope my videos help you. I try and put up a new video every 10 days, I hope you will enjoy following along with my other video. Cheers!
If this video helped you, please consider clicking on the THANKS button above 🙌
Here's some other Honda videos you might like: th-cam.com/video/rx0efSZpG7E/w-d-xo.html
Sorry! My bad…
The next video I watched, there you were using M6x1 dowels! 😊 Well done.
I’ll keep watching.
@@jimyeske8498 No worries Mr Jim. I just appreciate you watching. Cheers!
What you also need are the Briggs and Honda oil extractors! As seen in The same Bruce video. If you’re interested in the details. I can email some photos.
Hi. I commented here about an HR214 lawnmower carburator change. I don't know why my comments and your replies aren't here anymore. Anyways. I changed the carburator everything is in place and the mower problem stopping when changing the manual lever from choke to hi or low is corrected but when I change from hi to low it revs at the same speed. Any ideas?
@@JazzyScat hmmm odd. I remember and the replies are missing for me too. I can only suggest the control cable is out of adjustment, or it's slipping?
I like the lawn lady she is calm n keeps simple n explains step by step
I think she knows her stuff, God bless her.
I appreciate you watching Mr Mario. Cheers!
She does
I’ve watched many “ so called “ experts on the maintenance of a Honda carburetor but yours was the most direct , step by step method - easy to understand for even a beginner like myself !
I was ready to bring in my mower ( only 8 months old ) for repair until I came across your video !
comments like this make it worth every minute i put into this. Thank you so much for watching and welcome to the channel Mr H&J. Cheers!
Ma’am. I’m a diesel tech by trade and haven’t been able to get my mower to run worth a damn. It’s a Honda with the same exact carb set up as this mower. This video fixed that. Hats off to you!!!! Fires up first pull with ZERO issues now. Keep up what you’re doing.
Yay! I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Keepin it simple makes you a winner every time
Thank you Mr. David! I strive to KIS, it's easy to get distracted.
Best video on the Honda carb out there, no question. Thank you! Saving us regular folk lots of dollars.
I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
After spending three hours fiddling with reinstalling the carb of my gcv190, I found your video, followed your guidance and BINGO, got it done in just a few minutes! Your many many helpful tips and clear instructions made me confident that I can keep my equipment in top shape. I learned the hard way to mind the float valve…luckily found it at my feet:). Thank you Lawnmower Lady!❤
Glad I could help. Thanks for watching!
Totally underrated Channel imo😎
Thanks for the upload and positive thinking! Helped me a lot😁👍👌
Thank you for your kind words. Cheers!
Just like everyone said previously, you took the time and really showed in detail on how to take it apart and then reassemble the carb makes it easy to service or replace if you have to.
I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
I appreciate the parts lists too!
I searched and searched and finally came across your video by searching auto choke Troybilt. I can’t give you enough praise! Every guy that did a video had a fraction of a fraction of details that you did! I was stumped, but you squared me away. By far the BEST VIDEO of any instructional how to videos out there! I’m an HVAC tech by trade, but am now many steps closer to becoming my own diy small engine repair tech as well. THANK YOU!
I'm so happy to help. Cheers!
You did an excellent job explaining how to remove,clean,reassemble this Honda gc160 dirty carb to a great 1 pull to fire up outcome!
Keep up the great work!
Thanks 👍 I appreciate you watching!
I didn't watch how the float needle dropped out when I took my carb apart. Yours is the only video I've watched thus far which shows the direction
the needle goes into the port. That was very helpful as I was about to install the needle upside down. This was my first stab at small engine carburetor cleaning.
Glad it helped. I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Thanks LL! You did a great job of showing the detail points that others left me scratching my head on, the atomizer jet, the float needle, etc. excellent close-up work. keep on rockin' it!
Thank you Mr Raymond! Comments like this make me feel it's worth the effort. Glad to help. Cheers!
Never took a carb apart before but I got the clog out of my jet and my mower running in no time after watching this video. I used a piece of a plant that was skinny enough to bore the hole out. Thanks, Lawnmower Lady!
Glad it helped. Thanks for watching. Cheers!
Best step-by-step video for the Honda GCV160 carb replacement.
Thanks, I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Omg 😮you saved my life. Your video has taught me so much. I had to rewind how to screenshot it took me all day, but I feel so confident now about my own mower I cannot thank you enough I literally could start crying.!!!! 😅😊A MILLION LITTLE THANK YOUSE 🙏🏼🙏🏼
Happy to help. Cheers!
Another happy 'customer' here, watched your video the other day and fixed my mower in about thirty minutes. The hardest part for me was pulling off the fuel line, I think.
My machine is only a few years old and wasn't that dirty, but there was a little gunk somewhere that was causing it to hunt quite a bit. Running much stronger now. Thank you.
Great to hear that Mr Brian! Glad to help, Cheers!
Thanks. Some good tips in your video that I didn’t see elsewhere. If it wasn’t for getting those two bolts through so many assemblies this would be a piece of cake!
I have since fabricated some M6 threaded rod to replace the bolts, to assist with that gaggle of gaskets. My more recent Honda carb service videos show that. Thanks for watching!
Thank you so much for your information and willingness to share and teach. Your videos, particularly this one and other on this carb type, were very helpful and very well put together. I have been fiddling with my Troy built mower for a while now and each time it’s either just as bad or even maybe worse…until finally it would only run while choked then would stall out. So this carb breakdown was exactly what I needed to give me the confidence to dive in all the way and fix it right! Thanks again!
You got this Mr Derek! I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Lawnmower Lady, this is probably the best video I have seen in a long time. It's the first video on carburetor where someone begins by showing you how to remove the carburetor and putting it back on step by step. I had gotten fluster with the process. Thanks Lawnmower Lady.
Thank you Mr Gary for watching. Cheers!
Your video saved me and made me look like a hero in front of my family!! Thank you!! So easy to follow! Started on the first pull!!! 💪🏾
Great job!
Thank you Lawnmower Lady!! I have a Yard machine with a Honda engine, it won't stay on longer than about 3 or 4 minutes, about 20 feet of lawnmowing 😢. I think this is my next step. With your guidance, I think I'll successful!
Be sure and check your fuel cap. The vent might be clogged with debris. Next time it stops, crack open the fuel cap and see if it starts up. Without a vent to atmospheric pressure, as the fuel leaves the tank, it can create a vacuum that a gravity fed fuel system can't overcome.
@@TheLawnmowerLady already unplugged the vent holes in the gas cap along with changing the air filter, oil and spark plug. So, with your awesome assistance, it's off to clean the carb. Have looked into a ultrasonic cleaner too. Love your videos, your an excellent teacher and thanks for sharing!
Great step by step detail video detail. Appreciate that! Thank you much! Liked, subscribed and commented.
I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Thanks for this video. My small engine guy retired so I'm on my own. My GCV160 on a Craftsman won't run except a few seconds with starter fluid in it. There is fuel flow and the spark plug looks good and it will run for a few seconds which tells me there's spark. So it comes down to the carburetor which I took off and mine looks nothing like yours. It was fairly clean and the needle looked ok. Stumped, I ordered a new carburetor though there is no obvious fault with the one I have. The mover is a 2019 and been kept in a garage. I've never had an issue with a Honda engine before. You video was great for showing me things to look for though my carburetor is slightly different.
Did you take out the idle jet on top? Yours might have a plastic idle speed adjustment screw that needs to be removed. The plastic jet cones out and has to be clean. Tom, at @vintageemginerepairs has a great video on that style of carb.
Thanks a bunch for clear, detailed, and timestamped video! My lawnmower stopped working halfway through mowing my lawn. It would start, but immediately stop. Google suggested cleaning my carburetor would be a likely fix. This video let me confidently take it apart, and more importantly, put it back together again, fixing my lawnmower and saving me from the humiliation of my lawn looking like Ronaldo at the 2002 World Cup.
I had to google Ronaldo, nice hair-do LOL. I'm happy I could help. Cheers!
We've had this Honda GVC160 motor on an emergency lawnmower for the last 10 years. It's never run well and I've spent many hours trying to get it perform smoothly. In Australia they come with a manual choke and the idle screw is placed in such a way as to make it impossible to adjust once the carburetor is back on the motor. Along with the air box and the gaskets, they are the work of the devil. I take my hat off to you madam.
Cheers Mr Andrew! They can be difficult. i appreciate you watching!
I took the jet out and the atomizer rod came out and didn't know which way it went back, until I saw your concise breakdown and rebuild.
Thank you!
(I had it in correctly, but my luck dictates that I probably didn't)
Happy to help. Cheers!
Lawnmower lady, you are the best. You saved me money time and frustration. And I will only be using true fuel from now on. Excellent video, thanks so much.
I'm happy to help Mr Ken! I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Loving your work lawnmower lady
Glad to hear it Mr Ronnie!
Looking forward to your next episode and what lands on your job sheet
This is the best video I have seen yet on this Honda engine. Thanks for a very precise, step-by-step instruction.
Glad to help. Thanks for watching. Cheers!
Great video and great job of explaining everything you were doing and why. I have this same mower and have had the carb off before but your video was a great refresher and I learned some new things. Thanks-you are a natural teacher.
I appreciate you watching! Cheers!
By far the best video on this carb. I was planning on just tearing into it, as I've cleaned a handful of carbs, but I'm glad i watched this first, because i would have probably messed the gasket orientation up when I pulled it apart.
Happy to help. Thanks for watching!
@@TheLawnmowerLady just cleaned her up. First pull. So satisfying 😁
Stella, that was a nice demonstration and narration of cleaning the Honda carbs. Ive wrestled with enough of those gaskets, heat shields, etc. I went to the hardware store and bought 2 bolts ,1/4 inch longer and cut the heads off and use them as studs. Made my life alot easier and they work on all Honda small engines. Keep the videos coming. Looks like you enjoy what your doing! 👏👏👍🇺🇸 Roger
Thanks Mr. Roger for watching! I have some long threaded rods from a three arm puller that I use sometimes (when I remember :embarrassed: ) every now and then.
Another great video, Not Rusty. 😉
I’m starting to wonder if these are the uniforms from all the guys who can’t keep up with you. 🤷♂️
ZING!
Wonderful video. I'm a certified Honda small engine tech and thought you explained the carb clean process so the average homeowner could understand and follow the process. The only point I would add, and maybe you already did this, but I would have drained the gas tank as there was obvious water in the bowl. If you already did it prior to the video. I apologize. Thanks again...
Thank you Mr Larry! Indeed I do lots of things that don't end up in the video if I feel its is getting too long. I will say, my editing skills have tightened up and I can include more things. I appreciate your views and you comments. Cheers!
Got my mower running again! Carb looked pretty new but cleaned it anyway and it's running again. Thanks for the video!
Happy to help! Thanks for watching. Cheers!
Thank you you are the first person to show me were the needle goes and doesn't have the camera 5 feet away and covering the whole process with their hands
LOL One of the reasons I started making videos, I got tired of looking at the back of someone's head. I really appreciate you watching. Cheers!
I learned so much from your video. When I removed the carb it all fell apart so I had no frame of reference for the gasket orientation and auto choke.
Glad it helped. Cheers!
Tool tip: I used a piece of multi strand copper wire with the end stripped to clean out all the small holes. One strand for the smallest, a couple twisted together for the biggest ones.
I do the same thing, but I always lose that tiny octopus looking gadget in my shop. Thanks for watching.
An awesome job of explanation step by step. Warning about every step of the way, while cleaning & putting it together. Keep up the good work, I have GCV 160 Honda. Your video was the best one from all of them. I am quite confident that I can repair my Carb. George
Glad it was helpful. Cheers!
Muchas gracias. Excelente vídeo. Ha sido muy útil.
De nada Sr. Luis. ¡Salud!
Awesome video. You are a master mechanic. Well done!
Thanks 👍 I appreciate you watching!
I am real familiar with these GVC 160s
what a great video you made.
thank you for making everything look easy.
but I always called your emulsion tube a venturi tube
thanks for the correction
I will add that one emotion tube sludge is the main thing on nearly every carburetor that causes
surging rpms.
anyway it's great listening to do you do this for people. You do a great clear explanation.
Thumbs up.
Glad it was helpful! I often call it an atomizer ( I come from antique scooter world) and this is what Dellorto calls it in their older documentation. I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
This video helped me so much. I needed to see the gasket order and you did that. Thanks a lot!
You're very welcome! I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
I’ve always stored my mower with Stabil original formula stabilizer never had trouble till a couple years ago or so. Till my power valve stuck after I fixed it I watched a Stabil Marine 360 stabilizer. I got to thinking about it the marine formula it’s made to absorb condensation from the boat tanks I’ll try it in my mower and in storage. For the last two or more years it works really well doesn’t gel up to clog the carburetor. I’m using regular unleaded with the crappy ethanol and not a moment’s trouble. Have a Blessed One. Greetings from Silverstreet South Carolina.
Anything you do is better than doing nothing if you need to store it for a while.
I use my zero turn mower about 12 months of the year. I also use 87 octane gas in all of my mowers too. I have a Murray 38 inch that has had always had 87 octane gas in it. Never had NO problems with it
Me too, I have a self propel brigg Stratton engine for 15 years I also use 87 octane gas and never have a problem.
Very easy the way you explained it. Ordered the RIGHT parts and started right up. With a few mowers to work on I’ll be subscribing. Thank you.
Thank you! Cheers!
Great work here, and thank you for not saying "go ahead and..." constantly, like most of the male "experts" do in their videos! Keep up the great work.
I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
I like the pick idea in the intake hole. It is fun the watch someone else work on a carb. Good work.
Thanks 👍 Mr. Pender. I've enjoyed watching your videos for a long time.
thank you! was hard for me to figure out the float needle until I saw you mention it here
Glad to help. Thanks for watching!
Great video. Able to follow easily. Thanks. I have a lawnmower and a pressure washer with this engine, so very helpful.
Great to hear!
Nice work there, keep em coming you are a gem !
Much appreciated!
lawnmower lady - thanks for the to the point and very informational video. it was just what i needed to get things apart and more importantly back together.
Glad it was helpful Ms Lynn! Thanks for watching. Cheers!
This is such a great video! Super helpful and she really knows her stuff. A great tutorial on how to troubleshoot my carb issues. Well worth sending her a “Thanks” tip.
Glad it was helpful!
I watched your video and agree that it is the most comprehensive of all. Thanks and keep up your good work.
Much appreciated!
When I work on my Troybilt TB 240 w/ the Honda GCV 160 engine I use two pieces of wood dowel rods cut a bit longer than the carburetor bolts and insert them into the threaded holes in the engine block and assemble as you did. Then pull one rod out insert
your bolt, thread on loosely and repeat for the other side
Thanks Mr. Ben. I actually have some M6 threaded rod just for that purpose. I was really only removing the airbox to make it easier for the camera to see pulling the carb bowl and draining. I wasn't planning to pulling the entire jello filled carb.
Great video and great job explaining everything thoroughly.
I like that.
Please keep the videos coming
Thank you for watching Mr. George! Hope you subscribe and stick around. Cheers!
Very nice video, thanks very much! Very helpful! Those Hondas are such a pain with those long bolts and so many gaskets to get in the right order.
Thanks! Honda makes a very pricey “tool” for this that is really the bolts with no heads. I fabricated the same thing with two 6mm threaded studs. Most any other of my other Honda carburetor videos show this. Makes the job easier. Cheers!
Awesome job love the shirt, I too have been a fan of using guitar strings for years.
Thank you Mr. Rooster. I dug through my shirts to find this one for you!
@@TheLawnmowerLady thanks I really enjoy your channel 😊
The best video I have ever watched... Now, I have to figure out how to set the throttle stop and pilot screws positions... Ty!
I appreciate you watching!
Thanks for all your amazing details ! I was hoping to replace the carborater! I feel confident to look at it now!
Glad it was helpful! The original carbs are far better and more reliable than a lot of the aftermarket junk out there. Cheers!
@@TheLawnmowerLady I saw they don't cost too much.... Thanks
Great video! I was able to clean off and reassemble my Honda GCV160 carburetor thanks to your video!! Excellent job :)
You're welcome! I'm so happy to help. Thank you for watching. Cheers!
Nicely done, thank you. If you apply a small amount of dish-soapy water onto the outside of the rubber hoses, the clamps will slide along a bit easier. Of course, you don’t want to get any inside the hose.
Thanks Mr. George for watching. I have several bottles of soapy water in the shop to look for leaks. Need to remember to squirt those hoses. Cheers!
Great job Stella, they are a handful but good advice to turn of fuel flow after use.
Yep Mr Rick, got in the habit of turning off fuel tap from the antique scooter world. Thanks for watching. Cheers!
The large gasket between the carburetor and auto choke , which Honda calls an air guide, is shown in the reverse orientation on the factory parts assembly diagram. The way you have it assembled means the small hole doesn't align with the air passage on the carburetor.
On this particular model, it doesn't matter. Look closely at 12:47 That passage is sealed on the carb. There is no mating passage on the auto choke actuator. ( look closely during the re-assembly) It's commonly called a heat shield, and yes, on some models it does go on the other way. This mower came from the factory this way, no reason to flip it, IMO.
Thanks lady i got a lot of info from this video without trying to over complicate things.
Glad it was helpful!
Nice clear video. I do believe though, that you have the large square gasket the wrong way around. At least the markings on mine indicate that. The small high section in the corner is facing rear, not forward 👍
I think I did the same thing as you, matching up the witness marks. I didn't occur to me it was wrong until several months later. Maybe wrong from the factory? Maybe the fiddle faeries? Thanks for watching!
@@TheLawnmowerLady 👍
The OLD MAN at EP just saying that it is nice to see the ladies getting involved with small engine repair. A handy tool to get if you do not have it is a pressure pump to check for seating needle valves prior to installing the carb. Nikki carbs are the worst.
Thank you Mr. Wayne! I do actually test the needle and seat, but I figure YT would flag my video as inappropriate if I included pics of the old suck and blow with me lips wrapped around the fuel barb. Lol. I'm often too lazy to get out my miti-vac. Cheers!
Your welcome and good luck on the channel it takes time but is well worth it if you are dedicated to providing quality repair and service videos. Keep up the good work.
@@waynestefinashen239 Many thanks! I've watched EP channel for a few years now and I appreciate the succinct and the on point commentary. I strive to keep it simple myself for the average DIYer.
Later models have captive carb mounting bolts which make reassembly much easier. The air box goes on after the carb is in place and is held on with two 10mm nuts. There is no need to remove the top cover either. The idle speed sounds a bit high.
Yeah another one done by a professional.. great work sister..
Thank you Sir Mick. That means a lot coming from you. Cheers!
Wow, awesome video. Great detail, and great photography. Thanks for sharing all your tricks of your trade. Very helpful.
Glad it was helpful!
Hello Lawn Mower Lady. I came across your videos yesterday. You were working on a Honda mower and removing the carburetor. You removed the two 10mm bolts holding the card and used two studs to hold the carburetor. Ingenious!!! What are they and where can I get some? Thanks
Check this out: th-cam.com/users/postUgkxC_6jvO9O0MTWVuH7qFqG4bC3dLtbRgZ_ Thanks for watching. Cheers!
Nice job on there clearing the carb Stella
Thanks Mr Rob. Cheers!
One of the best how to videos Ive seen, thank you!
Wow, thanks!
Running the motor until it dies upon storage is good practice indeed but I found this will leaves some fuel in the carb bowl, I also loosen the carb bowl nut and let any residual fuel drain out. Keep safe and be merry
All good tips. I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
The Rooster is going to plead with you for that shirt 😆 I got one of those Honda's out back with the same issue plus they over filled the oil 🤨 Guitar strings oh I like that plan !
Thanks Mr Bill for watching.
This was perfect although may need to buy a rebuild kit . Thank you.
Thanks for watching. Cheers!
Kev here in Ireland great video love that little screwdriver
Thank you. Mr. Kevin for watching! Cheers!
Thanks for your video . I followed it and found my jet was clogged it starts right up
Glad it helped. Cheers!
What caused this, using ethanol gasoline?
I use non ethanol gas and so far have had little problems
Also use sea foam to help protect my small engines,
Good job explaining your cleaning procedure
Thanks for watching Mr Fred. Yes, ethanol laced fuel tends to separate and once the alcohol evaporates, you are left with water. It sinks to the lowest point in the system. I believe the gelatinous goo is the detergents induced in refinery process reacting with the water that was left. Non-ethanol fuel obviates these problems, but unfortunately is not available everywhere. Cheers!
Excellent job! Concise and complete. Many thanks.
Glad it helped!
Hi Stela, thanks for sharing this video. It was helpful. I have GC160 Honda engine as well and look like I messed up with the engine block threads while putting back 2 big bolts after carb cleaning. Not sure what options I got now and I need this mower soon. I checked bolts threads are good and now one of bolt inside of engine block is keep on turning and it is stuck inside of the engine block🥲. I started engine and it was leaking from carburetor because it is not tightening.
That's a problem with the soft aluminum of the head. The only real solution is a thread repair kit. You can find a M6 Heli-coil or other similar kit at most any auto-parts store.
Amazing ! Such a clear, useful video - I learnt a lot.
Many thanks......all the way from London.
You're very welcome! I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Fixed my issue started on the first pull thank you so much!
Yay! I'm happy to help. Cheers!
Very good teacher. I learned a lot from your video. Thanks
Glad it was helpful!
Nice n easy to understand even from australia. Fixed my stop starting issue with my Honda. Thanks mate 👍
G-day Mr Brad! Great to hear my video helped. Cheers!
Thanks... this video was very helpful,. Thanks lawnmower lady ❤
Your videos are the best!! Quick question where do you get the gloves your wearing?? Thank you 😊
Ahhh, you made me go look, LOL. I got these: amzn.to/4b4RQhL I like the grippy (sort of) nature and at 9mil thick they are pretty durable. Many other gloves are 6 or 8mil and tear too easily. That said, no gloves will hold up to carburetor spray, but these do pretty well in gasoline ( or petrol for my EU friends) and brake cleaner. I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Wish you'd spent more time on the pilot jet. 4th time tearing down & cleaning the same carb and resetting the governor. Cleaned the fuel tank too, but it still surges like crazy.
All the videos I've seen have me convinced it's the pilot jet beneath the Phillips screw. I can't get anything to penetrate the hole at the bottom center including smallest torch tip cleaner, lemon juice & oven cleaner.
However, I can see 2 horizontal holes at the bottom of the female threads. One is on the same side as the part number and the other directly across from it. One is a little larger & I may have made a little headway there. Not really sure.
Steve's smal engine saloon shows going into that center hole with a micro drill bit, with emphasis on when it finally gives way. If not for seeing that, I'd say there is no hole there and it's one or both of the horizontal that actually transport fuel.
After more videos, gonna try more lemon juice, pine sol if I have any, possibly boiling, and the micro drill bit(s) if they have 'em at Harbor Freight. Frustrating . . .
This video goes into much greater detail on that pilot circuit about 5 minutes in: th-cam.com/video/wJPM_ArLSgg/w-d-xo.html I use old guitar strings. The smallest E-string should be able to go straight into the jet from the top. I use the G-string to go into the front and make sure I see it looking into the top of the carb. As much as I don't like carburetor spray, it's probably the best thing to dissolve any varnish from old fuel.
Edit: It just occurred to me, I have had some of those older Honda double walled fuel lines collapse. Hope this helps.
@@TheLawnmowerLady Thank you so much the reply. I was surprised!
I watched the video you linked and appreciate it very much!
A quick update: Boiling water poured directly into the pilot jet hole seems to have helped. I now have spray coming up out of the pilot jet. However, I didn't try going thru it again with a torch tip cleaner (from either direction), but I will now.
Still surged like crazy upon startup. I experimented blocking some of the intake air with my finger and it would even out, but hard to keep the sweet spot. I taped it off as best i could and got to mowing.
It still surged some, intermittently though. Oddly, not as much when pulling it backwards nor when plowing through tall thick grass going fwd, and randomly not at all for 10 - 30 seconds at a time
The air cleaner housing & cover are pretty beat up, as are the gaskets from all the assembling & disassembling. Replacement might be the ticket.
Got some micro drill bits (only $2.99) but don't know if I should bother with them since I was able to confirm get spray coming up out of the pilot jet.
I will definitely check the fuel line & possibly replace it. Will keep u posted. Thks again!
@@evelynmahoney3569 This is how we all learn. Hope it works out for you. Cheers!
Hi there , Thanks for all your very informative videos. They all are really good.
If I may ask a question. What do you suggest I do next with a Honda Jonsered GCV 160 That won't start
I already changed the Thermowax plug, cleaned up the carburetor, what next?
Thanks in advance for your assistance with this issue.
Diagnosing a non-starter via internet is near on impossible, but my best advice is to start with the basics: spark, fuel and air. Those three things are crucial. I wish I could be more helpful. Thanks for watching.
Great video thanks for sharing!! I did the entire process everything step by step following your video and didn’t work, at least I try😅
Dang, sorry about that. Was it just not starting? Does it have spark? Can you squirt a bit of fuel of starter fluid into the carb and get it cough a bit?
@@TheLawnmowerLady before putting it away for the season I added fuel stabilizer. Last year the machine was working normal but I tried this season to cut the grass and didn't start anymore, I put some starter fluid on it and didn't do anything, I tried also replacing the spark plug and still didn't work so I'm digging a little bit more on the ignition coil and taking some measurements on that and see if that is what is wrong with it, I also noticed that one of the gasket was missing(one close to the air filter) but I don't know if that will make the machine fail. thanks for responding (FYI my machine is a Husqvarna engine Honda GCV160)
@@robertoariel8476 the gasket won't have anything to do with a no spark situation, but it would contribute to a hard start, poor running.
@@TheLawnmowerLady okay thanks I measure the coil and comparing with the information that I got on the web seems that the coil is falling off also I’m going to get the gaskets to make sure that everything is on place. Do you think that I should check something else?
love your video!!! This question is for my pushing mower, I feel like I did everything, cleaning the carburetor and fuel line , clean up the fuel tank cap et al, my Craftsman/Honda is still starting and dies 15 seconds later, what is the problem?
Often the idle circuit is plugged. Not so bad on this one, but more details in this video: th-cam.com/video/8qic4cARD2E/w-d-xo.html
I watched this one again! As in all of your videos, the camera work is excellent and no annoying music ! I was hoping to learn more about your ultrasonic process. I heard you once say that you like Pinesol as a cleaning solvent? Do you have anything more on this? Such as the mixture? effects on the parts? Thanks, and great job.....again!
Thank you very much! Although I've experimented with some music, mostly when I speed up the repetitious bits, I hope it's not too annoying 😇I think I went into a bit more detail on this video th-cam.com/video/JJ2AW0OlMYs/w-d-xo.html on my ultrasonic. I use PineSol most all of the time, about 5:1 water/PineSol. I find it has enough solvent properties to clear even badly varnished carbs. It doesn't really discolor the carb bodies, unlike orange and green de-greaser type solutions. It brightens up the brass bits as well. If I have rusted bits, CLR works well, but discolors parts badly. I wait a day or two, for all the sediment to settle on the bottom, and them filter the solution through a coffee filter. I can use the same fluid for several months. I really appreciate you watching. Cheers!
As always great video.professional and easy tp follow
Great video, very helpful. Quicky question about the choke plug: After noting the position of that wax plug with a cold engine, when the engine gradually warms up, does that plug draw back into the block or does it extend further outward?
The plug expands with heat, and retracts when it cools down.
Your video is the BEST on TH-cam! Thank you,.
Thanks for your kind words. I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
Very nice video LawnMowerLady. I always enjoy your videos & manage to pick up a tip or two in the process.
Just curious, what kind of ultrasonic cleaner do you own?
I recently did a video on that: th-cam.com/video/P6h54CpcotM/w-d-xo.html If you are looking for the exact one I use: amzn.to/3KMB76N Thanks for watching!
Hey ! Thank you so much ! You really helped me figuring this thing out , all the best !
I appreciate you watching. Cheers!
you did an excellent job. I appreciate your personality.
Thank you so much 🤗 I've enjoyed watching your channel(s). Your voice-over style keeps your videos moving at a great pace, and you cover a lot of great info.
@@TheLawnmowerLady thank you
Very good video Lawnmower Lady! Keep up the great work!
Thank you Sgt! Will do!
Liked the way you described..can I learn more in person and would you mind to teach me . If yes I would be thankful to you.
Thank you @kaka saggu I appreciate that. I hope my videos help you. I try and put up a new video every 10 days, I hope you will enjoy following along with my other video. Cheers!