The first few hours are flexible and variable with no full load, so running it around for at least an hour toodling about, and running the engine at various speeds for two or three hours is great. I would really not be concerned, it is just not best practice to do short periods of operation that do not get it warm enough to keep you from putting your hand on the block. It can take 5 or more periods of running it to get the 10 hours in, some now, and some in the spring is fine. Were it mine I would squirt a shot of engine oil in each spark plug hole when it is tucked into bed. Putting a hand ball, or super ball in the muffler also prevents some of the breathing that can cause rust in a humid climate. Jim
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Today's Featured Article - A Lifetime of David Brown - by Samuel Kennedy. I was born in 1950 and reared on my family’s 100 acre farm. It was a fairly typical Northern Ireland farm where the main enterprise was dairying but some pigs, poultry and sheep were also kept. Potatoes were grown for sale and oats were grown to be used for cattle and horse feeding. Up to about 1958 the dairy cows were fed hay with some turnips and after that grass silage was the main winter feed. That same year was the last in which flax was grown on the farm. Flax provided the fibre which w
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