Small Engines (Lawn Mowers, etc.): Husqvarna Loses Power, fuel air mixture, 2 stroke engines


Question
I have a Husqvarna YTH2148 48" riding mower. It is only 2 yrs old and I am having my first problem with it. The mower starting smoking about 3 wks ago. While cutting and idling it discharges greyish-white smoke constantly. The other day the mower just loss power. It runs fine, other than the smoke, but when I engage the blades and start cutting it losses power and then dies. If I disengage the blades it runs good again, but I soon as I engage, it dies.
   I decided to go ahead and do a complete tune up on it. I changed both air filters, the fuel filter, spark plug, oil and filter and all 3 blades.
   After all that, the mower does the same thing, blowes white, greyish smoke and dies as soon as I engage the blades and put a load on it.

Answer
Terry
For the most part, smoking is just as bad for a small engine as it is for you. Excessive smoke from the engine may be an indication of problems with the carburetor, rings, or gasoline:

Black smoke is a symptom of an overly rich fuel-air mixture. This could be caused by a choke that is partially closed, a faulty carburetor, or the need for a carburetor adjustment. Make sure the choke if fully open. See the sections on carburetor adjustment and carburetor cleaning.

White or black smoke may also result from yard debris, oil, or other contaminants on the exterior of the cylinder as the temperature after a few minutes of operation will reach several hundred degrees F even with proper cooling. Stop the engine and let it cool for a few minutes. Then, check around the cylinder, cylinder head, and under the shroud for grass clippings, leaves, oil or other spills, dead rodents, etc.

2 stroke engines will always produce some fine white/blue smoke since the lubricating oil in the fuel mixture is being burnt along with the gasoline. However, excessive white/blue smoke could indicate an incorrect ratio of gasoline to oil or a mixture which has been sitting around for a while - the more volatile gasoline evaporates leaving behind the oil. It could also be an indication of contaminated fuel.

4 stroke engines should produce virtually no smoke while running. At first startup of the season, there may be a few seconds of white/blue smoke resulting from the oil squirted into the cylinder at the end of last season (you did the preventive maintenance, right?) burning off as well as white smoke/steam from accumulated moisture. If you tip the mower on its side routinely (to clean out grass clippings, for example), oil may seep into the cylinder resulting in white/blue smoke at startup as well.
White or blue smoke while running may be an indication of an excessively worn cylinder or rings or a clogged or inoperative breather (the breather assures that there is always negative pressure in the crankcase - if not, oil can get forced up into the cylinder). Or, you may be using the fuel mixture for your 2 stroke weed whacker by mistake!