Thanks for all the great feedback and experience. I can understand how a neglected engine can fail but the frequency of this failure is just too high to ignore. A valve guide should NEVER move unintentionally - PERIOD! The fact that it does, apparently quite often, just screams POOR design. You can blame tolerance stack, Japan, heat, etc etc but the bottom line is it should NEVER move. A quick design review would find the root cause and I'll bet a minor change could prevent these early failures. If you keep blaming the heat, age, and the customer, you'll never fix it! (I hope your listening JD and B&S, hint hint)
Again, in this case, the motor was NEVER overheated, NEVER abused, NEVER dirty, and oil changed every year. At 113 hrs it should be barely "broken in". It was JD and B&S poor responses that really were unacceptable, hence the reason to look elsewhere.
Actually, this doesn't happen quite often. It doesn't even happen often. Those of us who work on these mowers all the time only see this infrequently.
And as we have stated, it's not just a Briggs thing. It happens on Kawasakis too and so many people think they are just the best engines out there.
Now if you want to talk about a design flaw that should have been fixed but has not it would be the single overhead valve Briggs head gasket failures! It's not a matter of if but when. They will all fail eventually and it is more about the heat Cycles than it is about the hours of use.
They didn't want to have a head bolt going into the intake runner and the design left too wide of a spacing between two of the head bolts on the right hand side by the lifter galley.
Every one of them that blows blows in the exact same spot in the exact same way.
Does every person who owns one of these engines have a blown head gasket? No! It only happens and probably 40 to 60% of them and that is usually and the years of ownership after year 8 or year 10.
Many people don't keep the mower long enough to have this failure because it often happens around year 12.
Most people having a head gasket needed to be replaced and the 9th to 11th year would not think it such a design flaw but I call it like it is.
The frequency of head gasket failure far, far exceeds the failures of slipped valve guides. Now do we want to throw in popped valve seats??
This too happens but even less often than the slipped valve guides.
It is also caused from severe overheating. I don't think I've ever seen a popped out valve seat where I would say it wasn't severely overheated and where I would say the tolerances were just incorrect enough till out to be a manufacturing defect. Every single one of them that I have ever seen was just perfect from the factory and would have never came out had the engine not have been hotter than it was supposed to be.
As I stated earlier, and others have concurred... It's almost always the same for slipped valve guides but it is more of distinct possibility for a guide to be just not quite as tight as the other ones in a batch of heads.
You also have to consider things like some people will let him over sit for a year or two and then get it running again. This can cause valves that actually stick open or closed and their guides. Same goes if they and just some water or left out in the rain. I have seen plenty of mowers mainly push mowers that had a valve stuck completely open. The only place that it can stick is in the guy. So when you start cranking the engine over and trying to get it to move it is trying to move the guide with it so that can loosen a guide that was otherwise fine.
You can take an engine that is just fine and let it sit for nine months to a year and a half and the varnish can build up on one of the valve stems. Then you fire it up and that extra friction is coercing the guide to try to move. This is not good in the grand scheme of things. Did you're mower set for any. Of time?? Did the carburetor ever have to be cleaned out or replace because it would not start?
As we said before, there's always going to be an outlier somewhere or some defects that rear their ugly heads early but for the most part there is no reason to avoid Briggs & Stratton engines.
The biggest fault here is the fact that on anything larger than a handheld leaf blower or string trimmer, the warranty is about more worthless than the paper is printed on. I never want to stand up or go to bat for the consumer or take care of the consumer. They always blame it on fuel related issue or operator error / lack of maintenance.
The simple fact is, they have painted themselves into a corner over the years by making items and competing on price point alone. They price them so cheaply that they don't make enough money to actually do the right thing for the customer and the Paradox is they can't make high-quality equipment because the vast majority of consumers by on price point alone and sound good features on paper.
If a company had the balls, or maybe the stupidity, to come out and make a high-quality mower and Market it as the two and three generation mower that's you use as a kid with your grandpa, then your dad used as you grew up, and then gave it to you when you got your first house... And price the mower at 80 to $100 more then what's in the store now but make it high quality and durable and last 20 years ,some of us would be willing to buy it.
The problem is, if we didn't need another one for 20 years they wouldn't be selling us a mower very often now would they?
Word would really have to get out. These are the best most durable mowers but how are we going to know that until they've been in your house for 15 to 20 years and then you start telling everyone??
I basically think they, with the help of cheap price Focus focused consumers who accept he Disposable mentality, have painted themselves into a corner that just can't be escaped from.
So we deal with the hand we're dealt and what we can easily obtain. We learn if there's any tricks to make them last longer, like keeping them at proper full running speed , taking the shroud off every one to three years and cleaning the cooling fans , and learning how to do our own repairs so it's not that big of a deal or expense when something does go wrong.