I'll second this post.  I have been using a leaf blower for around six years.  
Finally it craped out.  Just wasn't worth putting  any money in to.  So I 
bought a brand new Poland brand leaf blower, a month are so ago.  I have 
noticed the  exhaust  is sure allot cleaner.  Using the same gas mixture as  
with the old leaf blower.
Regards

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ray Boyce 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, April 19, 2008 1:03 AM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Two-stroke engines run cleaner than ever


  Outdoor power products like gas-powered chainsaws, weed trimmers, leaf
  blowers and water pumps really do run more cleanly and efficiently these
  days, and an incidental side-by-side comparison I stumbled upon this past
  summer proved it to me.

  I first noticed something interesting minutes after firing up a new
  gas-powered weed trimmer I'd bought to supplement the 10-year-old model
  we've been using at our house. Old faithful still runs as good as new, I
  just wanted a second machine now that a couple of my kids are old enough to
  help me wrestle our big country lawn into shape. What I wasn't expecting was
  any obvious difference in exhaust gas cleanliness and fuel efficiency
  between old and new machines. But, as it turned out, the difference was
  unmistakable.

  Burning the same gas-and-oil mixture from the same gas can, the exhaust from
  the new weed trimmer was odourless and invisible while the old model still
  puffed out its wisps of pungent blue smoke, just like it always had. And
  this difference is especially striking when you understand how dead-simple
  'two-stroke' engines are. What could engineers possibly do to make them
  better?

  The type of power plant in your car is called a four-stroke motor. This
  means it uses a complicated series of valves to operate, along with a
  reservoir of oil (that you need to change from time to time) to keep
  everything lubed. Two-stroke engines, on the other hand, (like those in my
  pair of weed trimmers), have none of the same valves. They're also
  lubricated by oil that's pre-mixed with gasoline. This makes two-stroke
  engines very simple, cheaper to build, lighter in weight and easier to
  maintain than four-strokes. On the downside, these two-stroke advantages
  have traditionally come with lower fuel economy and much dirtier exhaust
  emissions. In fact, when government emissions regulators first took steps to
  reduce small engine pollution about a decade ago, pundits predicted that the
  two-stroke engine would be forced into extinction because it was impossible
  to make them meet new air-quality standards. And while that prediction has
  proven true for some kinds of two-stroke motors, it hasn't eliminated all of
  them. Some have evolved to deliver remarkably low emissions and fuel
  consumption, as I learned first-hand back in August.

  When our household water well pump broke this summer, we relied on a
  two-stroke gas-powered pump for several days to draw water from Lake Huron
  while I gathered hardware for the repair. That little pump used less than
  300 ml of gas to fill a 1000 litre tank on the back of my pick-up truck, and
  it pumped all this water in less than 15 minutes. Amazing.

  To answer the how-they-do-it question, I called Brad Lacroix, technical
  manager with ECHO Canada. And to understand his answers, you need a little
  technical background.

  Almost all internal combustion engines use two parts called a 'piston and
  cylinder' to capture the energy released by a burning mixture of gasoline
  and air. And where these parts used to be made by factory equipment that
  drilled and ground the metal to shape, the ECHO two-stroke cylinders are
  actually cut with a kind of laser beam. This creates much smoother internal
  surfaces that seal better, last longer and do a better job preventing
  unburned gases from escaping into the atmosphere. The microscopic bumps and
  valleys on these laser-cut surfaces range from 5 to 10 microns in size. To
  put that into perspective, a typical human hair is a whopping 30 microns in
  diameter. We're talking very, very smooth and precise parts, here.

  Another efficiency-boosting feature of the new two-stroke engines is the use
  of a feature called a 'squish band'. This is a raised area of internal
  castings that forces the gas-and-air mixture into the middle part of the
  piston only. When all combustion occurs here (as opposed to some happening
  around the perimeter of the piston) much cleaner and more complete
  combustion occurs. Add to this other refinements like variable spark timing,
  piston rings that dissipate 60% of all engine heat, and internal intake
  ports that prevent unburned gases from leaving the engine prematurely, and
  you enjoy some very serious efficiency gains.

  If all of these technical details seem too complicated to bother with, don't
  worry. The bottom line is simple: today's top two-stroke outdoor power
  equipment runs so much more cleanly and efficiently than ever before, and it
  does it for reasons that would have seemed impossible just 20 years ago. And
  if this doesn't offer some hope for how technical progress can help us live
  both comfortably and responsibly at the same time, I don't know what does.




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