There is a yellow wire under the seat on my 14.5 HP Murray 42'' deck mower, and plug it in or don't that's where all killswitches are on a Murray lawnmower and pretty sure they still are today.
Push mowers have kill switches that are on the handle and kill the engine if you let go and riding mowers sometimes have kill switches under the seat to kill it if the rider gets off the mower.
There are dozens of different models of Craftsman riding mowers, with a different answer for each. You need to get the owner's manual for YOUR mower (you can get it on-line for free) and read the manual.
The engine kill switch is under the seat.
Let it run out of gas. or put a kill switch coming from the condenser and ground it to the body of the lawnmower.......the contact with the frame should ground out the motor thus killing the motor
The kill switch is typically the ignition key. Depending on the mower it could also be a red push button labelled "emergency stop"
Chrysler products do not have kill switches.Chrysler products do not have kill switches.
start bypassing the safety kill switches< or check they are working with an ohm meter
There is a loose wire between the switch and where the wire connects to the kill switch. On my Murray, the wire from the switch meets a wire that comes from under the cover where the spark plug fits. They connect together at the throttle control bracket. You might want to check the entire length of the wire(s).
Yes, but it does not make sense how a small lawn mower could kill a huge Zomboni.
The kill switch wire is broken or has come loose. If it is a push mower, look at the end of the throttle cable where it touches ground when the lever is in the OFF position. If it is a riding lawn mower, follow the wires from the ignition switch, you will find a disconnection someplace near ground (by the throttle cable bracket on my rider).
Chrysler does not use inertia or kill switches.Chrysler does not use inertia or kill switches.
Chrysler does not use kill switches.