mld213
New member
Equipment
L3200DT, LA524, Forks, Top & Tilt, Box Scraper, Tiller, Flail Mower, Ripper Bar
I have an L3200 DT just under a year old with 98 hrs on it. Has been running like a top since day one. 50 hr service completed by dealer six months ago.
This morning I had been tilling for about an hour and a half when the engine just died. Level ground, half a tank of fuel. No warning--no cough, no sputter, no rough running, it was as if I had just turned the key off.
My first thought was that I'd somehow run out of fuel, even though I had just put a few extra gallons in that morning and the gauge read half full. The engine spool down had the feel of a fuel-starvation / flameout event. Even though the fuel gauge read half full I checked the fuel filter bowl and it was full to the top of fuel.
I disengaged the PTO, put her in neutral and the engine turns over strongly and rapidly but will not even begin to run. To me it "feels" like it is either fuel or electrical.
I towed her out of the field and back to the shop. I pulled the fuel filter and got strong flow from the tank. The paper filter was clean with only mild sediment in the bottom of the bowl. I cleaned it all and put it back on and bled the air out of the filter and bowl. I removed the hose leading out of the filter and got strong flow there. Still won't start.
I checked the fuses in the fuse box by the clutch pedal, even though none of them would seem to cause a problem like this (regardless, none were blown). All the appropriate dash indicators light up.
It *seems* like I'm missing something obvious (and big)--an oil pressure sensor interconnect (don't know if this model has one)? Engine oil reads at the top of the dipstick.
If it were a gas engine I'd look for a spark but that's not applicable here.
Maybe the fuel injector pump? I guess I could crack the nuts on the injectors and see if they seep fuel (I have not gone that far).
Conditions were very dusty, but it was a cool, overcast morning and the engine temp was in the lower half of the gauge (how I wish they would put numbers on gauges).
In my younger days I did all my own engine maintenance, including complete overhauls and rebuilds so I have decent technical understanding and some experience--however that was a few decades ago.
I'm not opposed to having the dealer's service truck out to take a look, I was just hoping it would be something simple and easily fixable by me.
Any thoughts, suggestions or even WAGs are greatly appreciated.
Matt
This morning I had been tilling for about an hour and a half when the engine just died. Level ground, half a tank of fuel. No warning--no cough, no sputter, no rough running, it was as if I had just turned the key off.
My first thought was that I'd somehow run out of fuel, even though I had just put a few extra gallons in that morning and the gauge read half full. The engine spool down had the feel of a fuel-starvation / flameout event. Even though the fuel gauge read half full I checked the fuel filter bowl and it was full to the top of fuel.
I disengaged the PTO, put her in neutral and the engine turns over strongly and rapidly but will not even begin to run. To me it "feels" like it is either fuel or electrical.
I towed her out of the field and back to the shop. I pulled the fuel filter and got strong flow from the tank. The paper filter was clean with only mild sediment in the bottom of the bowl. I cleaned it all and put it back on and bled the air out of the filter and bowl. I removed the hose leading out of the filter and got strong flow there. Still won't start.
I checked the fuses in the fuse box by the clutch pedal, even though none of them would seem to cause a problem like this (regardless, none were blown). All the appropriate dash indicators light up.
It *seems* like I'm missing something obvious (and big)--an oil pressure sensor interconnect (don't know if this model has one)? Engine oil reads at the top of the dipstick.
If it were a gas engine I'd look for a spark but that's not applicable here.
Maybe the fuel injector pump? I guess I could crack the nuts on the injectors and see if they seep fuel (I have not gone that far).
Conditions were very dusty, but it was a cool, overcast morning and the engine temp was in the lower half of the gauge (how I wish they would put numbers on gauges).
In my younger days I did all my own engine maintenance, including complete overhauls and rebuilds so I have decent technical understanding and some experience--however that was a few decades ago.
I'm not opposed to having the dealer's service truck out to take a look, I was just hoping it would be something simple and easily fixable by me.
Any thoughts, suggestions or even WAGs are greatly appreciated.
Matt