I pour it in holes, drilled in tree stump, to be burned.
I pour it in holes drilled in tree stump, to be burned.
No for your lawn mower you will just need regular lawn mower oil.
Check the oil/fuel mix and make sure you have it mixed to the correct ratio. Else, try raising the blade on the lawn mower. If you have the lawn mower blade too low, mowing tall grass, it can make too much work for the mower and will cause it to overheat.
You will foul your spark plugs and probably ruin your lawn mower. Because that oil is not designed to mix with your fuel.
Only if it is a two-stroke (two-cycle) engine.
If you mean a mixed gas and oil, it may not hurt the mower, it may smoke until this mix is used up. Some mower tanks are easily removed and you can drain the mixture before you use it.
not 5050, it's 50:1 mix
the mix ratio for Lawnboys is 32:1 4 oz. per gallon
If you have fuel coming out of your air filter, then your carburetor bowl float is most likely gummed up an stuck. try tapping on the bowl, or you my need to take it off an clean it and the needle jet. How do you adjust air/fuel mix on a lawn mower motor?
some gas/oil mix (usually lawn boy) some electricity, propane, solar panels, and others just gasoline w/ a separate oil tank.
Being that it has crank case oil it would be a 4 Cycle. Engines that you mix oil and gas are 2 cycle.
You did not specify which brand of 2-stroke lawn mower you have. So, the ratios may differ. For a Briggs & Stratten 2-stroke engine the ratio will be either 50:1 or 32:1 depending on the engine model. It is always advisable to check with the manufacturer's manual or on the internet.