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#1
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Non Cub Cadet Briggs engine question
I have a Trac Vac with a 8HP Briggs (Same exact motor that's on my Troy Bilt Super Tomahawk chipper) on it that every time I've used it until today, it's never had any issues. The problem I had with it today is I was having a heck of a time keeping it running. I had to have the choke at least partially on to keep it going, and sometimes it would almost die, but then come back to life. I rebuilt the carb I believe last year, after which it ran and started much better. Normally, needing the choke to keep it going would be an indication that it's not getting enough fuel.
But here's the strange part - it only seemed to have trouble when I was moving (I rigged up the Trac vac boot that was intended for an older JD Zero Turn to the CC deck with some 'country engineering' to help with sucking up leaves). I discovered that after I got all the leaves sucked up that I could by mowing over them and had transitioned to manually sucking up the piles that were left, it ran perfectly at full throttle with no choke, but then as soon as I hopped on the CC and started to move, it would start to sputter and die. Any thoughts as to why it seems like the motion was causing it to die? |
#2
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Sounds like the carb is messed up.
Some more info on the engine would help, like the model # I have no idea what you have and "the same engine as my chipper" tells me nothing useful.
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2264 with 54 GT deck 1641 AKA Black Jack with a 402-E Haban Sickle bar mower JD317 dump truck BX2670 with FEL |
#3
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Had an interesting development with this - A post I read about someone else having a similar issue (engine running fine when stationary but having issues running when moving) sparked a though - it could be electrical, not fuel (although the chock would seem to indicate fuel).
For reference, this motor is a 190432-6145-01. The carb is a B&S 390323. A bit different design than most other's I've seen. I replaced the coil and cleaned up the two wires used for grounding it and shutting down the engine. Same thing. So I pulled the carb and took it apart again, nothing appeared amiss, the float moved freely, etc, but apparently, when I put it back together, the float wasn't stopping the flow of fuel like it should and it totally flooded the carb. So I pulled the carb off my Tomahawk chipper, which hasn't been touched other than taking it off the chipper. Fired up and ran like a champ - until I started moving. It wasn't as bad as with the original carb - but it still had some issues sputtering and had to run at about half choke. So I have no idea what it could be. Two different carbs exhibiting the same symptoms? I highly doubt at this point, that it's anything electrical. If it was simply a carb adjustment issue or a lack of fuel flow, I'd expect it to have the same issues running stationary or moving. With the design of this carb, it appears fuel is pulled from the very bottom of the bowl, rather than part way up like most other applications I've seen appear to, so it should require almost no fuel in the bowl for that to cause it to die. Any thoughts with this additional info? |
#4
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Water in the tank?
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(2) Original, 100, 102, 124, 73, 800, #1 and #2 cart, brinly plows, disk, IH184, IH244, 1948 F Cub |
#5
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Tank was bone dry when I added gas for the original carb, and if there had been some water in the bowl of the original carb, it would have been purged and nothing but gas in the one I pulled off the chipper.
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#6
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I think I may have gotten it fixed. I ended up taking the original carb apart again, soaking it overnight in solvent, cleaning the living heck out of it, and I also got a complete rebuild kit - new gaskets, emulsion tube, adjustment screws, the works. Pretty much everything except the body and the float.
It turns out, the reason this type of carb (Flo-Jet updraft carb) leaks and floods is not due to the float, it's due to the emulsion tube and its mating surfaces. Apparently, if you just screw it in and call it a day, odds are it's not going to be seated right and because the fuel enters the emulsion tube from the bottom of the bowl, unlike most other carbs I've seen where the bowl is underneath and it sucks fuel up from the bowl, fuel will just make its way past that bad seal and flood it out. After putting it all back together and fiddling with the high speed and low speed adjustments until it seemed to be running good and was running for 5-10 minutes full throttle without any sputtering or dying, I drove it around the yard for 10 minutes or so and it didn't seem to have any issues running. HOPEFULLY it really is fixed... |
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