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Tecumseh HM80-155135C 8-hp 4-cycle engine

Tecumseh HM80-155135C 8-hp 4-cycle engine Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Tecumseh HM80-155135C 8-hp 4-cycle engine, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

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Browse Parts for HM80-155135C 8-HP 4-Cycle Engine

  • Groove Pin for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 29783

    Basic engine diagram

    Groove Pin

    Part #29783

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Bushing for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 33368

    Basic engine diagram

    Bushing

    Part #33368

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Clip for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 631022

    Carburetor diagram

    Clip

    Part #631022

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Intake Valve for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 34035

    Basic engine diagram

    Intake Valve

    Part #34035

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Ring for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 29642

    Basic engine diagram

    Ring

    Part #29642

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Governor Linkage for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 33371

    Basic engine diagram

    Governor Linkage

    Part #33371

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Gov Lever for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 33454

    Basic engine diagram

    Gov Lever

    Part #33454

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • /brether Asy for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 28423

    Basic engine diagram

    /brether Asy

    Part #28423

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Bracket for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 33369

    Basic engine diagram

    Bracket

    Part #33369

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Valve Spring for Tecumseh HM80-155135C - Part 27881

    Basic engine diagram

    Valve Spring

    Part #27881

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

Tecumseh 8-HP 4-Cycle Engine HM80-155135C FAQs

The Tecumseh HM80-155135C is an 8-horsepower (8 HP), 4-cycle lawn and garden engine. That “HM80” designation is commonly used for Tecumseh’s 8 HP horizontal-shaft engine family, which helps when matching tune-up and repair parts by model.

Quick specs at a glance

Item What to expect for HM80-155135C
Rated power 8 HP
Engine type 4-cycle (gas)
Typical orientation Horizontal shaft

Why horsepower matters when ordering parts

Horsepower affects which components fit and perform correctly, especially on an 8 HP engine like the HM80-155135C:

  • Carburetor and governor settings: correct fuel delivery and speed control
  • Recoil starter and flywheel: proper starting and ignition timing
  • Muffler and exhaust: correct backpressure and mounting
  • Belts and pulleys on the equipment: correct load handling for an 8 HP powerplant

How to confirm you have the right engine model

Use the engine’s ID label (often on the blower housing or near the starter) and match it exactly:

  • Model: HM80-155135C
  • Spec/serial numbers: use these to narrow down exact part variations
  • Shaft style and diameter: confirm before ordering rotating parts

A reliable way to avoid mismatches is to use our model number search tips in how to find your appliance model number (and what it means for parts).

Why this answer is solid

Tecumseh’s HM80 series is widely identified as an 8 HP engine family, and your specific model number HM80-155135C falls within that series. That makes 8 HP the correct horsepower rating to use for troubleshooting and parts matching.

Last updated: February 2026

Tecumseh largely stopped making new small gasoline engines when its engine manufacturing operations shut down in late 2008 (with remaining engine-related assets and parts support transitioning in 2009). For your Tecumseh HM80-155135C 8-hp 4-cycle engine, that means the engine itself is typically older, but many service parts can still be sourced by model and spec.

What this means for HM80-155135C owners

Even though new Tecumseh engines were no longer being produced after the 2008 to 2009 transition period, HM80-series engines remain very serviceable. The key is matching parts by the exact model and any spec numbers stamped on the engine shroud or ID tag.

Common maintenance and repair items to plan for:

  • Carburetor cleaning or rebuild (hard starting, surging)
  • Ignition tune-up (spark plug, ignition coil testing)
  • Fuel system refresh (fuel line, filter, fresh fuel)
  • Governor and throttle linkage inspection (hunting, overspeed)
  • Oil leak checks (crank seals, valve cover area)

Quick timeline (high-level)

Milestone Typical timeframe What you may notice today
Engine manufacturing winds down 2007 to 2008 Fewer “new engine” options in the market
Manufacturing operations close December 2008 Production effectively ends
Parts and remaining assets transition 2009 Parts availability varies by model and supplier

Why it matters when buying parts

Knowing Tecumseh engine production ended around 2008 to 2009 helps set expectations: you usually repair these engines by replacing wear items and tuning the fuel and ignition systems, not by looking for brand-new OEM engine assemblies.

For the most accurate match, we recommend confirming the full engine ID information before ordering; our guide on how to find your appliance model number (and what it means for parts) shows what to look for and why it affects fit.

Last updated: February 2026

Tecumseh engines like the HM80-155135C are usually hard to start because the engine is not getting the right fuel-air mix or a strong spark at cranking speed. The most common causes are stale fuel, carburetor varnish, choke/primer issues, or weak ignition and compression.

Most common causes (and what to check first)

  • Old fuel or water in fuel: Drain the tank and carburetor bowl; refill with fresh fuel.
  • Carburetor restriction: A dirty main jet or emulsion tube causes lean starting and repeated pulling.
  • Choke not fully closing: Linkage binding or a misadjusted choke plate prevents cold starts.
  • Primer not working (if equipped): Cracked primer bulb or blocked primer passage means no enrichment.
  • Fouled or worn spark plug: Replace or clean and set the gap to spec for your plug.
  • Restricted fuel flow: Check the fuel line, in-tank screen, and any inline fuel filter.
  • Low compression: Worn rings, cylinder wear, or valve sealing issues make cold starts difficult.

Quick diagnostic: symptom-to-likely-cause table

What you notice Most likely cause What to do next
Starts on spray/prime, then dies Fuel starvation or clogged carb Clean carb passages; verify fuel flow
Only starts with choke partly on Lean condition (jet clog, air leak) Clean jet; check intake gasket
Backfires while pulling Timing/ignition or lean mix Inspect flywheel key; verify spark
Pull cord feels “too easy” Low compression Do a compression test; inspect valves

Steps we recommend for a reliable fix

  1. Refresh fuel: Use fresh fuel and consider stabilizer for storage.
  2. Verify spark: Check for a strong blue spark while cranking.
  3. Confirm choke/primer operation: Choke should fully close cold; primer should push fuel.
  4. Clean the carburetor thoroughly: Remove the bowl, clean the main jet and passages.
  5. Check compression: Most 4-cycle small engines typically show roughly 60 to 120 PSI depending on design and test method.

Why it matters

Hard starting is usually a sign the engine is running too lean, has weak ignition, or has low compression. Fixing the root cause prevents plug fouling, repeated recoil wear, and no-start situations when you need the engine most.

For help matching the correct Tecumseh parts and diagrams to HM80-155135C, use the model lookup on Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

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