The Three Classic Carburettor Symptoms
Most carburettor problems show up as one of three things: hard or no starting, rough idle, or dying under load. Each has different causes, but the carburettor is involved in all three.
- Hard or no starting: Fuel isn't getting to the engine, or the mixture is wrong
- Rough idle or hunting: Idle circuit is blocked or air/fuel mixture screw is out of adjustment
- Dies under load: Main jet is partially blocked; enough fuel to idle but not enough when the engine is under demand
Simple Home Checks First
Before assuming it's the carby, rule these out:
- Fuel age: If the fuel is more than 4–6 weeks old (especially mixed with ethanol), drain and replace it first
- Spark plug: Pull it and check. If it's black and sooty, the engine is running rich. If it's white, lean. A normal plug is light tan to grey.
- Air filter: A clogged filter causes rich running — the engine gets too much fuel for the restricted air. Clean or replace before anything else.
If It's Still Playing Up — It's Probably the Carby
The giveaway is fuel varnish. Pull the carburettor bowl (or the carby itself on a diaphragm-type unit). If you see brown or yellow residue, sticky deposits, or a film inside the passages, that's old fuel gum. It only needs one small jet blocked to cause all of the symptoms above.
A carburettor service at Gotcha Mowers starts from $65. We strip it, clean it ultrasonically, inspect all jets and the float valve, replace gaskets and O-rings, and set idle and mixture correctly. Most jobs are done in 1–2 days.
When to Replace Instead of Rebuild
Some carburettors are beyond economical repair — particularly cheap pattern carbs on budget machines, or anything that's been run on water-contaminated fuel for a long period. We'll tell you which situation you're in and give you the cost difference before proceeding.
CARBY TROUBLE? FROM $65.
Carburettor service and rebuild. All brands, fast turnaround.
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