![]() |
K241 drop in fit to an Original?
Hello expert CC folk. Been a while since I've needed some support. My Original mows the lake property every year. Sadly, last Sept one of my last mows, the engine seized. It will not move.
Now, I could and should tear down and rebuild with a new piston, rings, hone, etc, but I didn't have time until now. Not sure what seized. It had good fresh oil in, but I was cutting a high bermuda run. Yesterday, a K241 10HP in good compression fell in my lap for $75. It comes complete with the starter/gen, wiring, carb, pulleys, muff, even air cleaner. The kid selling it said it was on the shelf in his dad's garage for ages. He thinks it came out of a 107? Anyway, I grabbed it up. Now, of course we get to the nuts of the matter. Is this a drop in replace of my 7HP Original engine? My SN is around 18,000 don't know the exact number. Any help is much appreciated. Belt pulley size? Wiring change? Bolt flange? I'll be mowing this spring again, and want to keep the Original out there earning its keep. :beerchug: |
Anyone? Is this thing on?
|
Yes, it's on. Not everyone has experience with Originals, let alone engine swapping one.
Be patient, someone will opine. |
First off, The engine pan is wrong, altogether different.
The 241 oil pan hangs down between the frame rails whereas the original sits on top of the frame proper and has a flat bottom. |
Perhaps I should provide a picture of my K241. Seems to me the bottom of the engine is flat, and the four mounting holes are right in the bottom of the crankcase. I'll go take a pic later and might help.
|
2 Attachment(s)
The two frames are completely different as well.
The original frame is one solid stamped & bent unit. You may be able to swap the pans around, yiu will have to compare the bolt spacings on the block. |
The bolt pattern is the same, but you will have to remove the bolts on the frame. Try sitting the K241 on the frame an see how it fits with the tank on it, you can see what you will have to do.
|
1 Attachment(s)
Quote:
|
Sounds like a lot of extra work to shoehorn in a different motor that you don't know how well it runs. I'd rebuild the original motor and be done with it for another 50 years.:TwoCents:
|
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:53 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions Inc.