Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter

   / Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter #11  
Later CPSC mandates resulted in moving the starter cord to the handle of walk behind mowers.

After that, B&S stopped making their totally reliable flat head mower engines that seemed to run forever so long as you changed the filter, plug, and oil regularly.
 
   / Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter #12  
My grandmother had one of those, she couldn't pull a recoil but used the windup one for years.
 
   / Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter #13  
Those foot start engines were B&S. They were used on some of the early powered clothes washing machines. A lot of rural areas did not have electricity so the gas powered washer was for them.

My parents had one. I never saw it used on the washer. By the time I was old enough to know what was going on, my dad had replaced the gas engine with an electric motor.

Richard

Here is a photo of this engine:

Richard
 
   / Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter #14  
There was an elderly lady whose lawn I mowed when I was about 14. She had a wind up start lawn mower.
It worked fairly well.
My dad had a Gibson garden tractor with rope and pulley starting, it got painful if it backfired.
My first car, a 1959 MGA, had a crank stored in the trunk that was inserted through a hole in the front bumper to start it if the battery was dead, with a Lucas electrical system it was needed fairly often!
 
   / Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter #15  
Years ago I bought a local sales/service shops B&S NOS parts inventory and there are a couple of those wind up starters there.
Our go cart Dad built in late 50s had a B&S motor from a Maytag washer that was pedal kick start. Exhaust was a flexible steel hose with like a clam shell cast iron ball on end I guess so it would be placed outside. We just ran a straight pipe. Late 50s...it would probably go 15 mph.
Thanks for the memories.
 
   / Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter
  • Thread Starter
#16  
Years ago I bought a local sales/service shops B&S NOS parts inventory and there are a couple of those wind up starters there.
Our go cart Dad built in late 50s had a B&S motor from a Maytag washer that was pedal kick start. Exhaust was a flexible steel hose with like a clam shell cast iron ball on end I guess so it would be placed outside. We just ran a straight pipe. Late 50s...it would probably go 15 mph.
Thanks for the memories.
If you look on ebay and such, they're selling those wind up starters for $90!
 
   / Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter #17  
If you look on ebay and such, they're selling those wind up starters for $90!
Good grief! This place my grandfather bought a new Yazoo and an Economy tractor from new and years ago bought their stock of old Briggs parts. I should list all that stuff, it's all new, 50s-60s.
 
   / Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter #18  
A lot, maybe most, of those old Briggs parts seem to be pretty hot sellers if the price is decent. I keep an eye out for stuff I can use even if I don't need it today. You'd be surprised at the interest in old mowers, Lawn Boys and old JDs for sure.
 
   / Briggs and Stratton Wind Up Starter #19  
My dad had a small horizontal shaft Briggs with a cast iron block that had a kick starter assembly on the output shaft. The engine was shot or had some problem. I never saw it run, but I remember that kick starter. I've never seen one again.
There were some military WWII small engines built with kick starters
 
 
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