Some new treasure yesterday. Replaced the stale fuel in the Stihl and away it went, nothing wrong with it. The corvette is a beauty, sadly someone through it out because of the vibration due to the broken blade. Replaced the blades with a set of NOS ones I had here and mowed my lawn, what a great mower, they don't make them like they used to. Could someone date it for me please. I haven't looked at the last 2, that'll be a job for today.
There’ll be someone more knowledgeable than me along to date this but it looks to me to be a 1964 Model Corvette 2. Originally it would have had an impulse starter but it’s been fitted with a 1974 onward zip starter. Most likely after the pawls on the impulse starter wore out, as was common.
I wonder whether they also fitted the decompressor. I suspect that starter may not last as long as it otherwise would if they haven’t. Is it difficult to operate the pull start?
Now to just remove that horrid looking zip starter and source an impulse set up. The further back you go, the nicer the engines sound. To think these were being tossed out everywhere in favour of the plastic covered models, back in the early 1980s. Beautiful score there BigTed. A shame the blades are no longer available -at least easily.
Ahh, if only victa had kept producing the thumblatch catcher series, they would be in better shape today!
The 1964 Corvette is a bitsa ,the base is wrong for the engine ,as the side port should be on the opposite side for later 1964 Corvette mowers like this. When the port is on the other side it's used for edging and is not a side discharge port.
The engine is missing it's front mount air cleaner and obviously the starter should be the impulse starter , I'm not a fan of the impulse starters ,I have early mowers that run this starter and they work fine without a decompressor.
The impulse starters were only designed to work for a few years but a recoil starter will outlast the engine.
Thanks for the reply Gents, no, its not that hard to start and it hasn't had a decompressor fitted. The orange starter will be removed and replaced by a green or white one. Impulse starters are a PITA and almost impossible to find in good working order. So my guess is somewhere along the way someone re-engined this later model corvette with a 64 model motor. P.S. the powertorque Victa Rapier just needed a starter re rope and the Sanli needed a carby clean and a new spark pug boot. All in all a good little bounty..
I do agree, not a fan either. Just that the bright orange starter looks too modern and out of place on that mower and just makes it scream 'bitsa'. Congratulations on getting the trio working.
Ahh, if only victa had kept producing the thumblatch catcher series, they would be in better shape today!
Interesting to hear it’s ok to start. I asked because I have a 1970 utility that was originally fitted with an impulse starter which someone has adapted to the Victa 18 style manual wind pull rope. The spinning exposed pulley doesn’t thrill me in terms of safety and it tends to catch on bushes when I give it a bit of a run.
I have a couple of options with it, take the impulse starter off a spare, excellent condition, mid-60’s Corvette engine and shroud assembly I have kicking about, or adapt it to take one of my several early 70’s zip starters.
I might try the zip starter if the absence of a decompressor doesn’t cause a problem.
I just fitted a motor without a decomp valve fitted on a 24 and it starts very easily. It also had a G3 carby on it so I fitted a G4 on it and it is a great easy starting machine