Does this compression tester have the appropriate fitting for this engine? I can't find the thread specs for the required tester for this engine so I was hoping maybe somebody has used this tester or has this information?
Sorry I was preoccupied. That may have the correct adapter but hard to tell as I don't have the thread dimensions for your glow plug.
Does this compression tester have the appropriate fitting for this engine? I can't find the thread specs for the required tester for this engine so I was hoping maybe somebody has used this tester or has this information?
It starts better with some throttle for sure. I don't honestly think it would ever start if the throttle was at idle, even in the summer. I give it about a 30% throttle for it to start in the summer. In the winter I've only started it three or four times so I've not figured out what works best yet, but I've certainly given it a lot of throttle to get it to start, not necessarily full throttle.One more question, does it start better if the throttle is at full fuel? If so there could be an issue with the start spring in the governor assembly.
in post #60....12.6v or higher is considered fully charged and that's right where mine is so it shouldn't be low battery voltage, though it could be low voltage at the starter due to a bad connection somewhere. That's what I'll test next time I'm near the tractor.
I am not making claims I am just reiterating what Kubota says about their own engines. The snip I added is right from the WSM and the OP manual says to key on and directly start with no mention of preheat. And I do understand that the glow plugs heat during crank but that is limited unless you have a long crank.Address the glow plug circuit before you even bother with the compression.
Which by the sound of it cranking is not an issue.
Contrary to @ruger1980 statement, This Kubota engine requires the glow plugs to work properly for it to fire when cold.
The glow plug circuit works in preheat and while cranking.
I don't have to preheat my glow plugs unless it's in the 20's but if I do, it certainly starts faster.
The chances of a start spring being damaged is really rare, but could happen.
You will have to pull the stop cover and the throttle cover in order to inspect it.
If you go down that path let me know and I'll explain better.
Explanation for that was given back in post #12.Fired up immediately twice in a row, can't explain that
Disconnected the wire from the indicator and GP, 1.2 ohms.Disconnect that wire and the wire off the added glow plug indicator and use a meter to see if they are the same wire.
G1 and G2 should be spliced together.Disconnected the wire from the indicator and GP, 1.2 ohms.
Connected G2 to the wire going to the GP, bypassing the indicator and I get battery voltage on the wire on preheat when not connected to the GP. It immediately started when trying to check cranking voltage.
I then connected the wire back to the glow plugs and on preheat it's 7.02 volts. It's possible there is a dirty connection somewhere on this wire, but I've not located it yet as most of the connectors are all buried under the fuel tank.
G1 I can't find in the harness so I've not been able to connect that one to the glow plug yet.
Pulled some more panels and was able to get to the splice where somebody added this indicator to the stock harness. In the pic you can see that it's connected to a black wire with a white stripe which is the same color as G1 so I disconnected it from both ends and an ohms test of 0.2 ohms indicates that it is G1. Picture attached of the splice where the indicator connected to the black and white wire G1.G1 and G2 should be spliced together.
Do yourself a favor and pull the fuel tank if that's what's stopping you from getting to the wiring.
I don't think there is room for a large jumper cable clamp to reach the bus bars. Minimal clearance between the intake manifold and injectors. I'll see what I can do though, I've got a few different cables and one may be small enough.simple ,easy test..
no key required.
connect DMM on the GP bus bar,set to volts....
use a 'battery jumper cable'...connect to GP busbar and then +12 of battery, yes you WILL get sparks...
what does the DMM read after 5 steamboats ??
BTW 'busbar' is the 'straps' that connect all the GPs together
If you had a DC ammeter good for 75 amps, I'd suggest using that , but most guys don't have them.
I got it, you're just wanting to bypass "everything" and checking voltage drop to see what's to be expected under ideal wiring conditions.+ve of meter to GP busbar, -ve to ground.
It'd be nice to KNOW what the voltage is.
Say it's 10 volts, then when you turn key to start, you should get the same 10 volt reading. If you don't it's either bad wiring, bad connections or bad switch. In order to pass 50-60 amps ,you need PERFECT wiring and connections. Compare the wiring to say your electric dryer ( 40 amps) . I can't recall IF you've replaced the ignition switch, so the 'battery cable bypass test' is important.