ML-TOYS
New member
When this happened it was running correct ?
Edit, read your first post again
Edit, read your first post again
with Pat, it sounds like a cold seize issue...Doesn't cold seizing normally happen soon when the engine starts up? I've never seen it happen once an engine gets to normal operating temp, unless it goes underwater (Honda Ranchers are notorious for this).
I was out pulling the boys around in the snow with sleds
Why would a cold seizure lock up the piston only to let go again later?
How's the pull start mech?
Then why don't these engines cold seize when used on a snowblower?
Did you miss the bit about
Engines are designed to have minute tolerances at operating temperature which, due to heat expansion, are, obviously, larger when the engine is cold; these tolerances close up at a predetermined rate under normal operating conditions...
Snow = colder or lower than "normal" operating temperature which means everything has contracted past the "normal" point; as a result, during warm up, everything is expanding at an unusual or abnormal rate & the different components are not reacting to each other as they were designed to do...
In these conditions, even after running for 15 minutes, due to the atmospheric conditions, the engine still may not have been at "normal operating temperature", hence, the cold seize...
I have the valve cover removed. There appear to be four bolts holding the top of the head on, two inside the valves. Do I need to disassemble the rocker arms? Or if I remove the four bolts will the entire assembly liftoff?
I'm running a Predator on my snowblower, fire it up and go. No issues with it, or the 3 other engines that have been on it. (I keep borrowing them for other projects, lol)
Although I did discover that snowmobile engines won't live long being run hard in 90* weather...
Yep i put a predator fresh out of the box on my snowblower last year and just ran the heck out of it the next day for hours