You may be able to find one at a lawn mower parts and repairs shop. Check the Yellow Pages for one near you.
Try http://www.briggsandstratton.com.
Assuming you are talking about lawn mower engines, it is located on top of the gas tank. The gas tank is of course where the gasoline is poured into.
No you do not put oil in the gas - 4 hp Briggs & Stratton motors are 4 stroke, not 2 stroke in which you do have to add oil to the gas.
Type your answer here... It backfires because it is a Briggs and Stratton - replace it with a Honda or Kholer.
Do not know of a McLane that does not have the oil in the sump and the gas in the tank. In other words they do not normally mix together
The fuel system on a Briggs and Stratton engine works by fuel being gravity feed from the fuel tank. Fuel goes to the carburetor where air and gas the mix, after the air and fuel mix it is feed into the engine where the engine goes through the four strokes.
Yes
For a Briggs and Stratton motor 3.5 motor used straight gas and oil in the crank-case, there is no ratio.
There is no "gas oil ratio", the 3.5 hp Briggs and Stratton engine is a four-stroke design, oil should NOT be put into the fuel!!!
it has a divided diaphragm inside and one side sucks gas from the gas tank and the other side sends gas to the carb. And I think the hose that goes to the decompression aparatis is where it gets its air/suction
A Briggs and Stratton L head twin engine wills pit gas out of the carburetor and flood out when starting if the diaphragm has been damaged. This will cause excessive fuel to enter the carburetor.
You either have a bad bulb or a bad fuel line between the bulb base and the gas tank. If there is the slightest hole or crack in the bulb it will not work. They are easy to replace.