Usually, but consult a mechanic or the manufacturer of the mower.
A regular blade is typically sharpened only near the end with a bend at the tip to increase the airflow. A mulching blade is sharpened from the end towards the middle and has multiple cutting angles which aid in cutting the grass multiple times into smaller pieces. The better mulchers also include a discharge plug which forces the grass to be cut into fine particles. When changing blades always make sure the length is the same and that the mounting holes match the original.
Read more: Can_you_change_from_regular_mower_blade_to_mulching_mower_blade
For a walk behind rotary lawn mower:Remove spark plug wire (to prevent an accidental start)Tip mower up at about a 45 degree angle (have the air filter up to prevent getting oil in it)Using a wrench turn the blade bolt counter-clock wise to remove the blade (if the blade is difficult use a block of wood to wedge between the blade and the deck to prevent it from spinningReverse the procedure to reinstall
If you are saying that the mower shuts off when you engage the blades (or put the lever for the blades in the up position) then the most common problem is a bad seat safety switch. This is located under the seat. It has two wires going to it.
Mulching grass clippings back into the lawn is actually really good for the grass. It helps to put nutrients back into the soil and it also enriches the overall composition of the soil.
For a healthy lawn, you should sharpen your lawnmower blades. Dull blades don�t cut your grass, they tear and damage it. You can use a file or a grinding wheel to sharpen them. You should always remember to remove the blades from the mower. Sharpening the blades while they are still attached to the mower is dangerous. You also need to keep the blades balanced. If your blades are uneven, sharpen the heavier end until the blades are level. Unbalanced blades cut unevenly and put extra wear and tear on the lawnmower. This will eventually damage your lawnmower�s engine.
The reason the mower dies when the blades are engaged can be caused by a couple of different things. One, the spindles for the blades are frozen so the blades can't turn stopping the engine. Two, the fuel system isn't allowing sufficient fuel/air flow when the engine is put under a load.
It will depend on what kind of mtd mower you got but generally there is a bolt in the center of the blade that you take off and the blade will come right off. It is alot easier to take it off with an impact but if you dont have and impact you will have to put something to hold the blade and break lose that bolt and make sure when you put it together the blades go back on the same way and if the blades have any kind of bracket on it you put those back on the same way as well.
To sharpen a reel mower, put grinding compound on the blades. This makes the blades into their own sharpening stones. Push the mower around until it is easy (this is called lapping). Wash off the grinding compound. Make the blades so they go the right way again.
you get the mower and flip it n it's side then you unscrew the bolt. take off the old blade and pt the new one on then you screw the bolt back on.
the treads are stander so it will left for lossen and right for tighten
Be sure that when you put the unit in reverse that the blades for the mower are not engaged. That will prevent the mower from operating
i had high lift blades on my mower & it would overheat. i put regular blades on it & problem went away. could be your problem
I do not have too much experience, but on my mower, their is a lever you push to engage the blades. The lever tightens the belt enough that the engine starts to turn the blades. Maybe you could do this on your lawnmower. I do not have too much experience, but on my mower, their is a lever you push to engage the blades. The lever tightens the belt enough that the engine starts to turn the blades. Maybe you could do this on your lawnmower.