Pushing a Lawnmower: Motor Stress or Acceleration?

  • Thread starter Thread starter geordief
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Pushing a back-wheel drive lawnmower while it is in motion does not stress the motor, as the governor regulates speed to maintain constant RPM. Acceleration occurs more easily on slopes due to gravity, while flat surfaces yield less responsiveness. Disabling the governor is strongly discouraged, as it can lead to severe engine damage, such as shattering the piston rod. The governor is crucial for preventing overspeeding and ensuring safe operation. Overall, maintaining the governor settings is essential for the mower's longevity and performance.
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I have a mower with back wheels that move the mower over the lawn (a back wheel drive).
If I apply foward pressure when the machine is already in motion what is going to happen?
Assuming that the wheels do not skid can I succeed in accelerating the mower or am I simply stressing the motor ?
If so ,where?
(If I simultaneously apply an upward pressure -so that the motor pivots on the 2 front wheels- will this take the stress out of the motor ?)
 
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Welcome to PF.

You won't stress the motor, only yourself. The motor has a governor to prevent it from going too fast, and when you push it, it'll reduce the power to the motor to keep the rpm roughly constant.
 
russ_watters said:
Welcome to PF.

You won't stress the motor, only yourself. The motor has a governor to prevent it from going too fast, and when you push it, it'll reduce the power to the motor to keep the rpm roughly constant.
thanks.Well I don't expect you to be a lawnmower expert but perhaps you might be able to explain why it does in fact accelerate quite a bit when I am going down the slope but more or less refuses to respond if I am mowing on the flat.
Does this damage the mower?

Also would there be any benefit in disabling the governor? (if I could organise it it would be simpler to ask the service man to reinstall the settings that came when I bought it- he changed these because he couldn't understand why the motor was cutting out so much and gave it back to me running slower but ,at least, not cutting out any more...)
 
DON'T DISABLE THE GOVERNOR! It will overspeed and you will shatter your piston rod within a few minutes. Ask me how I know... a serviceman recently messed up my dad's snowblower and the engine ran away. When he didn't shut it down after about 2 minutes it was done. The piston rod was in about a thousand pieces.
 
Turbodog said:
DON'T DISABLE THE GOVERNOR! It will overspeed and you will shatter your piston rod within a few minutes. Ask me how I know... a serviceman recently messed up my dad's snowblower and the engine ran away. When he didn't shut it down after about 2 minutes it was done. The piston rod was in about a thousand pieces.
thanks.That sounds like irrefutable advice.
 
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