Clinton Engine Serial Numbers

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Listed below in numerical order are all the various model Clinton engines manufactured. New Listing 1960s Clinton engines sales service Dealer manual large. Time left 6d 13h left. 0 bids +$15.50 shipping. S Q Y p Y o n s T o r e d H D E Y P 9. 5 Clinton Engine 293-62 Jet Needle Adjustable NOS. Number of bids and bid amounts may be slightly out of date. See each listing for international. Clinton engine models: models 300,300-350,A-300,VS-300,500: models 650,700,B-700,500, models 760,B-790,C-700,VS-700,800: models 860,890,A-800,A-860,A-890. Re: Clinton Engines Corp. Maquoketa Iowa USA in reply to David Southward, 12:04:34 I recently aquired an out board motor and it says that it was manufactured by Clinton Engines Corp.The Model# is K700 2107A,the serial# is 647476, the type #is 6027370R. Clinton Outboards. Outboard Engine Manufacturers Boat Part.

Clinton Outboard has its roots in Clinton, Michigan. Clinton Machine Company had been manufacturing gears for tank turrets during WW II. After the war, owner Don Thomas saw a need and decided to manufacture a line of small gasoline engine.

His company and sales grew rapidly. Toward the end of 1946, the company employed over 1000 employees. And, by 1949 with soaring sales, they had out-grown the plant in Michigan.

In 1950 Don Thomas purchased a factory in Maquoketa, Iowa. This factory had manufactured huge industrial saws made by the Maquoketa Company.

Clinton

Up to 1954, Clinton Engines had manufactured single cylinder air cooled engines, inboard engines and chain saws. Clinton introduced its first Outboard motors in 1954. Through the years the Clinton Outboards have been sold under many different brand names and through many different sales outlets.

The Outboard Industry was changing in the early 60's and Clinton needed capital to modernize their plant. Mr. Thomas was unable to raise the capital required and sold the company to 'The Charnay Group of New York'. With the new management team in place, Clinton Engines floundered for awhile with very little improvement.

In 1966, 'Clinton Engines' ran out of money and filed for bankruptcy. The bankruptcy court approve sale of Clinton Engines to a Mr. Martin Hoffinger of 'Lomart Company'. He down scaled the Clinton operation and reopened in 1967.

Numbers

They continued to manufacturing small engines. By 1980 the chain saw and outboard divisions were sold off and liquidated. The only portion of Clinton that remained was the Clinton Engines Parts Department.

Hard core parts for these outboards are getting more difficult to find as time goes on. Many older outboards used common Ignition and Carburetor venders for that period. Discount Marine Parts has Ignition and Carburetor repair kits for most all of these older outboards. If we don't have what your looking for, we have many sources to locate your part. Obviously some parts are just not available. We can sometimes find it used and often we have the part made if there is enough demand. Discount Marine Parts has a large inventory of parts for most brands of American made Outboards, Inboards and Sterndrives. We also have most parts and service manuals available.

Thank you for stopping by and please come back!

Merry Tiller History
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The first Merry Tillers in the UK were produced by the Wolseley Sheep Shearing Machine Company in Birmingham in the late 1950's. Very early Wolseley cultivators had a Suffolk engine. This proved to be too small for the job and a Briggs & Stratton engine, (as on US machines), was substituted. The British Lawnmower Museum in Southport contains an example of the type C Merry Tiller Major fitted with a Webb cylinder lawnmower attachment. (Webb were part of the Wolseley group of companies). In 1958 Wolseley changed their name to Wolseley Engineering Ltd.
The Type C sold in reasonable quantities and many are still in use. Its Achilles Heel is the 'Transport wheel assembly' which is inclined to collapse when worn. This does not affect the machines performance in the soil but getting it to the vegetable patch is a problem! Engines were 2.5 or 3 HP Briggs & Stratton. Chassis on early models was folded 'angle iron', this was a bit flimsy and rolled steel angle was substituted during the Type C's production run. Finger Tines were fitted as standard with 'Slasher' and other tines available as extras. Coupling tubes were used to join on extra tines in order to cover more ground in one pass. The Professional rotovator was also available which was similar to the later type D Major except for the use of a 2.5 hp Clinton engine.
The Type D came out around 1961 and had a cast steel 'hitch' (earlier Majors used a fabricated hitch) and a rectangular section 'Skid' replaced the round bar type used on the earlier model. Larger (10') transport wheels were used (made by the Hughes company, another member of the Wolseley group) and the transport wheel frame was much stronger and quickly detachable. Serial numbers for these machines start at MT.20,000 for the Major and MTP.5,000 for the Professional which was fitted with a larger (Clinton) engine. This Merry Tiller is almost identical to its' contemporary US Professional model. Handles that swivel to the side were listed as an option. The coupling tubes were now welded to the extension tines. At some time in the mid 1960s a belt guard was fitted. The choice of tynes became optional and most customers chose 'slasher' tines instead of 'finger' tines. 'Type D' was no longer stamped on the nameplate.
Clinton Engine Serial NumbersClinton

Clinton Engine Serial Number

In about 1966 new, stronger handles were fitted, now attached to the chaincase by a single bolt, through welded on brackets. Serial numbers had restarted with an M prefix for Majors, P for Professionals and a T prefix for Titans. The Titan looked similar to the Major but shared few components, having a different, all roller bearing chaincase with three sets of chains, a stronger hitch casting, different chassis, larger 5HP engine and two sets of belt pulleys for changing speeds. The Professional continued with a new, stronger hitch casting and the same handles as the swiveling type fitted to Titans and optional on Majors. In about 1968 the engine on the Major changed to the Briggs & Stratton type 80200. Still a 3HP unit it had a pulsa-jet carburetor that fitted on top of the fuel tank, which was now behind the engine. The extension tines had swaged tubing instead of coupling tubes to join them together. These machines sold in large numbers and by 1974 the Merry Tiller was 'Britain's Top Seller'. The use of plastic transport wheels and, in about 1976, a 4hp engine for the Major seem to be the only changes in a decade. Other models had joined the lineup, the Titan GT with its all geared transmission, the Trident and the weird and wonderful Twin Six which was two Merry Tillers tied together. The 5hp 'Super Major' replaced the Professional about 1976. The Wizard and identical Cadet with a single transport wheel and lightweight tines, were also introduced at this time. Two different Wizards were made, a 5hp version with a heavy angle iron chassis and a 3hp version with a lightweight angle chassis.

A radical re-design was carried out in 1978. New handles, chaincase, belt guard, a folded steel chassis and smaller transport wheels altered the look. The Titan now had a reverse gear in the chaincase. The GT got the new chassis and a 7hp engine. Sheet metal 'cowls' on top of the engines came in. Other minor modifications meant that few components from earlier models were carried over. The Trident and Twin Six had been dropped. The makers name changed to Webb for a short time.

The final models differ from the 1978 lineup in a number of ways. In 1983 a new lightweight pressed steel 'chassis' was fitted over an angle iron one, hitch castings and handles changed again, and a plastic belt guard was used. The Wizard name had been dropped, the 3hp Cadet gained folding handles and a new model the Spartan, basically a Major with a 5HP engine had been added to the range. The Super Major had a reverse drive belt as standard. (Earlier Majors had reverse as an accessory). The 5HP models had an extended hitch. The 7hp Titan GT was discontinued. An all new 5hp Titan GT with independently clutched rotor shafts to give skid steer, was advertised in 1983 brochures but not listed in price lists and probably never reached the public, so the Titan toped the Merry Tiller range. In about 1984 Atco took over production when Wolseley decided to concentrate its activities on plumbing and domestic boilers. Wolseley Plc are now the largest plumbing sundries supplier in Europe. The engine cowl, by now a complex pressing, did not survive the Atco takeover. Atco had joined the Qualcast group and some modified Cadets were sold as Qualcast B66 rotivators using an updated version of the Suffolk engine that was used on the first UK Merry Tillers. The end of British production came around 1990.

The last of the line, the Atco Merry Tiller Major.

Whilst every attempt has been made to ensure the above history is correct, records on Merry Tiller production are patchy. If you spot any mistakes please let me know. Also do any of Wolseley/Atco's Merry Tiller component suppliers still exist?. Contact me by email

Clinton Engine Serial Numbers

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Clinton Engine Serial Numbers Diagram

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